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Stars
at Noon
Poems from the Life of Jacqueline
Cochran
Enid Shomer
These poems give voice to the
life of the first woman to fly faster than the speed of sound.
While Jacqueline Cochran was alive,
no man or woman in the world could match her records for speed,
distance, and altitude flying. Founder and director of the
Women's Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) during World War II,
Cochran continued to fly competitively until she was sixty,
owned and operated her own line of designer cosmetics for
three decades, ran for Congress, and generally placed herself
on the path of history. Having begun life as a foundling in
the crushing poverty of a lumber company town of the Florida
panhandle, she described her life as "a passage from
sawdust to stardust." Yet after her death she has barely
been remembered.
Poet Enid Shomer brings back
this mercurial, dazzling, powerful woman. These poems speak
in her voice and in the voices of her mother, teachers, husband,
confidants, and political opponents, shaped by Shomer's consummate
formal control and stunning lyricism. Illustrated with photographs.
Praise
for Stars at Noon
These
poems are poignant, witty, and well-turned. This book not
only makes a major contribution to the annals of women and
the turbulent era Cochran lived in, but because it is immensely
readable, it may break the sound barrier between historical
facts and passionate feelings."Maxine
Kumin
"How
refreshing it is, when so many books of poetry seem interchangable,
to come across Enid Shomer's marvelous sequence, Stars at
Noon. Jacqueline Cochran's life was an astonishing one, and
it is evoked by Shomer with deftness and empathy. As a work
of visionary hagiography, it is comparable to Robert Penn
Warren's great Audubon poem. In some alternate universe, where
poetry is afforded the respect it should have, Stars at Noon
would be an enormous (and deserved) popular success."David
Wojahn
"Jaunty,
audacious, toughand filled with soulEnid Shomer's
Stars at Noon recreates an American life. Like the subject
of her book, Shomer's poetry flies, whipsaws, and is in love
with words."Alicia
Ostriker, author of The Little Space: Poems Selected and
New, 19681998
Praise for Enid Shomer
"Shomer
is both soothingly melodic and powerfully syncopated . . .
as she adroitly mixes and matches the sacred and the profane,
the classical and the casual."Booklist
"Shomer
writes in a style that is intensely metaphoric, beautifully
cadenced, and surprising in its imaginative reach."New
York Times Book Review
Enid
Shomer is the author of three other books of poetry: Stalking
the Florida Panther (The Word Works, 1988), winner of
the Washington Prize; This
Close to the Earth (Arkansas, 1992); and Black
Drum (Arkansas, 1997). Her book of stories,
Imaginary Men (Iowa, 1993), won the Iowa Fiction Prize
and the LSU/Southern Review Prize, both given annually for
the best first collection by an American author. Her poems
and stories have appeared in The New Yorker, Poetry, The
Atlantic, Best American Poetry, and many other magazines
and anthologies. She has been visiting writer at the University
of Arkansas, The Ohio State University, and Florida State
University.
2001
5.5" x 8.5"
112 pages, 5 photographs
$16.95 (s) paper
978-1-55728-712-0 | 1-55728-712-0
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