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Overview
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781944838904 |
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Publisher: | Gallaudet University Press |
Publication date: | 10/20/2021 |
Sold by: | Barnes & Noble |
Format: | eBook |
Pages: | 98 |
File size: | 1 MB |
About the Author
Read an Excerpt
Norwegian Krone, 1891My grandfather once gave me a silver coin worth two ore. On one side, a rampant lion, crowned, and on the back, the number two, encircled by a wreath of linden leaves. I carried this coin in my pocket every day, going out and coming in, while playing, reading in the town library, waxing my skis, or meeting classmates to sing every evening in the pine-ringed square. I would slide my hand down to feel its rigid edges, its markings raised in relief. It smelled of his tobacco, his cologne. It never slipped out, even as I hung, upside down, in the tree I’d climbed, swaying in the breeze off the fjord, nor when leaping from rock to rock below the jagged cliffs. The year stamped on its face was 1891, the year of his birth. I give this coin now to you, wrapped in purple tissue paper, tied with an orange ribbon. As you move about, as this coin jangles with its mates, rubbing themselves smooth and shiny, think of me. Touch its gleaming surface. Finger its impressions. Keep it safe.
Table of Contents
ContentsNotes from Childhood
Norwegian Krone, 1891 3
Down the Road 4
November, 1963 5
Ortiz’ Dry Cleaners 6
On the Au Sable River 7
Flag Pole 8
Notes for My Former Loves
Two Birds 11
Climbing the Bluff 12
Wake 13
Sherry Glasses 14
Marriage 15
After He Leaves 16
The Internet Dating Game 17
Frame 18
Notes from My Travels
Longitude 21
Lost 22
At the Ferry 23
Colorado Farewell 24
Thirst 25
Massage Therapy 26
Piazza 27
Mangalore 28
I See Horses 29
Underground 30
Notes from Motherhood
A Mother’s Lament 33
Root 34
Soldier Son 35
Hovering 36
Fare Well to Six Children 37
Notes to David
Thunder Bay 41
Chance 42
Wisp 43
Shopping 44
Proposal 45
Roofline 46
Psalm 47
Desire 48
Marriage to a Widower 49
Wednesday Mornings 50
For David 51
Delayed Gratification 52
Solstice: Still Life with Husband 53
Notes Toward Aging
While Weeding 57
From Car to Schwinn and Back Again 58
Main Street 59
Diskobolos 60
First Drafts 61
For Aging Couples 62
March Morning 63
Presque Isle Landscape 64
Notes Toward Death
We Birds in Love 67
Sail 68
To My Biographer 69
Toward Death 70
Passage 71
Haiku Sequence: Night Watch 72
Winter Night 75
Acknowledgments 77
Gratitude and Thanks 80
About the Author 81
What People are Saying About This
“This book is a life-long journey that begins, beautifully, with the request for a private existence (‘Sometimes I want a life unseen, above the bookstore’); it asks for the life of attentiveness, a life of detail (‘A small life, such as the one in which stew / bubbles on the stove and there is a wooden table / set with two bowls, two spoons, two mugs for milk / and thick napkins, white and folded. Bread bakes / while steam from the kettle clouds my glasses.’). It is these details that give the poems their power, their imagistic depth and sweep. The poet does a beautiful job giving us the intimacy of perspective, the clarity of view, especially in the poems that look back, that deal with memory in poems that are narrative, but not prosy, lyrical but not needlessly inaccessible. There is a clear emotion running through these pages and the reader can relate to the voice of these poems. There is also a beautiful economy of language in this book. The tension between what is said and unsaid is beautifully balanced.”
“The poems in Above the Birch Line are a harvest of arresting detail, entrancing musicality, and consistently evocative narrative. You'll find your eyes, ears, and heart revisiting (and marveling at) each line, image, and stanza the way one pores over, say, a score by Claude Debussy. Pia Taavila-Borsheim's work honors her path, but she also takes us along on these vivid recollections. Lucky, lucky us.”
“Pia Taavila-Borsheim’s Above the Birch Line invokes a rich, resonant past through the clear-eyed and compassionate lens of present wisdom. From the silences of Deaf parents whose sign language speaks volumes, to the tranquil summer days of Michigan rivers, outboard motors, and hours lost to ‘the lapping waves crowding one upon the other,’ Taavila-Borsheim writes with a sure touch and an inclusive vision. She is the mother who bids a literal ‘fare well’ to the adult children who have left home for the wider world, and she is the poet who wryly recalls former loves while vividly chronicling travels to Colorado, Key West, Italy, and Mangalore ‘where, in moonlight, / musicians finger tablas, harmoniums, / singing and moaning to ancient ghazals.’ Above the Birch Line offers poems that are literal ‘passages’both journey and revelationand those who join this singular voyage will find themselves fortunate, indeed.”
“With imagistic precision and a rare generosity of spirit, Above the Birch Line confronts the sweep of a lifeits joys and hungers and sorrowswhile relishing the tiny details that somehow make all the difference: ‘Pecans on waffles. / Purple lantana. Frothy ferns. / Dew glistens on coquina walls.’ I was especially moved by this book’s daring meditations on old age: the contradictory salve and stab of memory during ‘this time of too much time’ and yet the unexpected sweetness near the end.”
“Haunting, aromatic, and atmospheric, Pia Taavila-Borsheim’s poems reveal a coming to terms with the order and disorder of life and nature. At once panoramic and microscopic, they are moving and cinematic, shifting focus between details faraway and up close.”
“Pia Taavila-Borsheim’s Above the Birch Line is part poetic autobiography, part prayer book: a celebration of life in all its complicated beauty and a call for communion with the natural world. But it’s also a guidebookin sections moving from Notes from Childhood to Notes toward Death, with important stops in betweento a lifelong journey of discovery. These poems offer us a careful contemplation of ‘matters of heart and hand’ from a sharp-eyed poet ready to capture each moment of wonder, fleeting as ‘the flash of a cardinal’s red wing / in a snowy forest.’”
“These poems are infected byfull ofwater in all its guises. And thisthe presence in nearly every poem of rain, snow, bays, creeks, clouds, huge lakes, rills on glassis also Above the Birch Line’s extraordinary strength. There is a clarity, a fluidity to these poems, a grace of registers from the very small to large, from childhood past old age, from early desire to late. And the poems hold within themselves a quiet urgencyto say a life, but a life in its various contexts and containers, a life deeply connected with the world. It is also a book of real, quiet, and, in its own way, ferocious maturity.”