The Voice of That Singing

by Juliet Rodeman

$19.95

 

Juliet Rodeman creates a visionary world in which the here and now—each remembered place, historical or mythical landscape, and moment alive with casual gesture—is redeemed by intimacy.

Format: paperback

Out of stock

ISBN: 978-1-936797-98-1 Categories: ,

“The best we can say of a book is that we wish we had written it. I can say this of Juliet Rodeman’s The Voice of That Singing. I never wanted it to end, and it didn’t. I carry the singing with me still.” — Rebecca Valley, Drizzle Review

“All throughout The Voice of That Singing there gathers, most gently yet undeniably, a sense of awe and honor for creation impossible to interrupt. Mist and sunlight, fence-lines, lilacs and human voices enter here upon transcendent errands and onto an America we have nearly forgotten how to imagine, much less to love. This is Luminist writing. This is poetry that cannot fail.” —Donald Revell

“When I read Juliet Rodeman’s The Voice of That Singing, I am overcome with that first swooning when poetry transported me to the country where “our trued selves / [are] leaning over the azure balcony / above narrow streets of bread and sun.” This is one of the most beautiful books of poetry I’ve ever read. Glorious song and stunning linguistic play, scenes from the family farm — “we are radio singing, the kitchen cupboards rocking” — the ebb and flow of intimacy, the realities of the body’s changes, elegies for her sister who died of AIDS, and crossings into the other side. All the ecstasies of poetry Rodeman lays before us, inviting us to “come feel, caught around the wait, the accessibility of everything, talk-walking down any street of a new world.” — Aliki Barnstone

Juliet Rodeman creates a visionary world in which the here and now—each remembered place, historical or mythical landscape, and moment alive with casual gesture—is redeemed by intimacy. Whimsical and sometimes shocking, these poems are filled with the heartbreak of what happens to our bodies. In a series of “anticipatory elegies” the poet journeys to the Underworld, moving through incantations and harmonies, hypnogogic terrors and quiet conversations under the stars, transforming individual grief with tenderness.

Juliet Rodeman grew up on a farm in Missouri, one of twelve children. She earned a PhD at the University of Missouri, where for nearly two decades she taught literature and composition. Her poems have appeared in Crab Orchard Review, Denver Quarterly, Southern Poetry Review, and American Poetry Review. This is her first published collection.

 

Additional information

Weight .4 lbs
Dimensions 6 × .5 × 9 in

Morning, with Rooks

The republics are looking for a declaration,
hillsides of silence under the gale of trees.
The county of cows stands. Anyway,
the skies are windy and womanish.
I have so much background — the barn doors open.
There’s rural news from the provinces,
the republics are looking for dénouement.
Beautiful are the skies and womanish.
Promise fields of harrows and plows,
the whole countryside blooming.
Catastrophe such a rickety world.
We sleep tonight under the thinnest blankets.
Girls lift their spring skirts and slip from the balcony.
Rooks are flying south, creeking overhead.