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Reviews & Readings by & about Baker

 

 

Changeable Thunder

Poems by
David Baker


Changeable Thunder marks David Baker's emergence as a major contemporary poet. To his abiding sense of the Midwest—its politics, people, and landscapes—Baker adds a powerful historical dimension, with poems ranging from Puritan New England to the modern subway. Of particular note are poems on the works of other writers, as he reanimates Shelley's letters, Samuel Sewall's diaries, and Walt Whitman's novel. With brilliant technique, dazzling formal variety, and moving intimacy, Baker's poems explore personal illness, erotic and familial passion, artistic creation, and the constant work and changing weather of one man's life.

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"The poems collected here are supple and capacious, revitalizing in their engagements with American consciousness and American vernaculars. . . . Baker writes with the distilled, distinguished attentiveness only the finest poets can reliably command."

—Linda Gregerson, author of Negative Capability: Essays on Contemporary American Poetry (forthcoming 2001)


"David Baker's eye on nature is unblinking, and his observations delicate and accurate, but his eye on human intimacies and interactions is just as clear. For me, he is the most expansive and moving poet to come out of the American Midwest since James Wright."

—Marilyn Hacker, author of Squares and Courtyards: Poems


2001
5.5" x 8.5"
104 pages
$16.95 (c) paper
978-1-55728-715-1 | 1-55728-715-5

David Baker is a professor of English at Denison University and the author of several books available from the University of Arkansas Press.


from
The Puritan Way of Death

How hard this life is hallowed by the body.
How burdened the ground where they have hollowed it,
                                                     •• where they have gathered to set the body back,

handful by handful, the broken earth of her.
They have gathered to sift back the broken clod
                                                     •• of her body, to settle her, now, back down.

"A child is a man in a small letter," wrote
John Earle in sixteen twenty-eight, "Natures fresh
                                                     •• picture newly drawne in Oyle, which Time and much

handling dimmes and defaces.". . .

 

 

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