Disquiet

Disquiet

by John C. Witte
Disquiet

Disquiet

by John C. Witte

Hardcover

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Overview

Disquiet is a collection of poems that utilizes natural phenomena—a bright beach, a fallen tree limb, the weight of gravity—to evoke and reflect upon memory and human experience. The poems are structurally innovative, each shaped around a central axis as they trace the speaker’s growth from childhood to adulthood. Acute observations resonate throughout the book as its focus shifts from the natural world to the world of the made—the grocery cart or pie-case or microscope—to the world of visual art, and then back. The poems are subtly braided together in a way reminiscent of the invisible bonds that unite snowflakes or cells.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780295994512
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Publication date: 03/02/2015
Series: Pacific Northwest Poetry Series , #15
Pages: 88
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.60(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Disquiet is John Witte’s fourth book of poetry and his second book in the Pacific Northwest Poetry Series. His poems have appeared in The New Yorker, Paris Review, American Poetry Review, and numerous anthologies. The recipient of two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, he lives in Eugene, where he teaches at the University of Oregon.

Table of Contents

I. ilk

Kinglet

Fledgling

His Kite

Paper Plane

The Me

Shiba Onko

Sarge

Phantom

Just This Train

Saturn

The Roach

Ornithology

Nest

Touching the Animal

Aubade

The Bumblebee

Mind Over Matter

Snails

Cicadas

Heirloom

Pie Case

Microscope

Wind

II. clay

Floaters

Going the Distance

It So

Then One Morning

Love and Life

Grocery Cart

Riddle

Cesium-137

Frogman

What Began

Seizure

Fireflies

At the War Memorial

Crossword

Oxblood

Gravity

The Will

Who Knew

The Widower

Grief

Pumice

Instead

When You Come to Lethe

III. kiln

Sonata

The Surgeon and the Poet

Scabsong

Apology to My Left Hand

Jesus and the Splinter

Lincoln

Leaving the Museum

After Yoshitoshi

Napoleon’s Bath

Saint-Remy Asylum

O

Y

Ask

Burning the Book

Ginkgo

Vespers

Wrestling the Angel

The Spider

Butterfly

Acknowledgments

About the Author

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"In John Witte’s poems, the elements—air, water, earth, fire—are all in flux, all caught in the fierce beauty of their disquietude. Each poem exhorts us to see how much ‘in love we are how brief / how fitfully burning.’ Praise to this tongue stammering, scrambling, plunging to say its hellos, its goodbyes. What a wonderful, wondrous book Disquiet is."—Paulann Petersen, Oregon Poet Laureate Emerita and author of Understory, reviewing a previous edition or volume

"The sixty-seven lyric poems that comprise John Witte’s Disquiet shed their beautiful lamplight on so many separate elements, beings and conditions, one can feel the loom of Neruda’s Elemental Odes, and hear in them, exquisitely, the voices and footfalls of one’s own life and the darkly marvelous lives of the imagination. This is an utterly distinctive volume, courageous, disquieting indeed, in its technical and emotional clarity, and in the amazing range of reference that includes us all. If you love poetry, you will love this book."—Christopher Howell, author of Dreamless and Possible

Christopher Howell

"The sixty-seven lyric poems that comprise John Witte’s Disquiet shed their beautiful lamplight on so many separate elements, beings and conditions, one can feel the loom of Neruda’s Elemental Odes, and hear in them, exquisitely, the voices and footfalls of one’s own life and the darkly marvelous lives of the imagination. This is an utterly distinctive volume, courageous, disquieting indeed, in its technical and emotional clarity, and in the amazing range of reference that includes us all. If you love poetry, you will love this book."

Interviews

The poems collected in Disquiet observe the wonder as well as the uncertainty of our lives. We find ourselves in nature, among the animals, in poems that are organic in form, suggesting the shapes of leaves and crystals, and the symmetry of our bodies. Yet the voice halts and stammers. We long to embrace our humanity, yet find ourselves both drawn to, and estranged from, the natural world. In poems of childhood and family and inevitable loss, we celebrate the joys and suffer the hardships of life.

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