Gun/Shy
Poems that seek stability in family and community while coping with a country full of conflict and change.

The poems in Gun/Shy deal with the emotional weight of making do. Tinged with both the regrets and wisdom of aging, Jim Daniels's poems measure the wages of love in a changing world with its vanishing currency. He explores the effects of family work—putting children to bed, leading parents to their final resting places—and what is lost and gained in those exertions. Childhood and adolescence are examined, through both looking back on his own childhood and on that of his children. While his personal death count rises, Daniels reflects on his own mortality. He finds solace in small miracles—his mother stretching the budget to feed five children with "hamburger surprise" and potato skins, his children collecting stones and crabapples as if they were gold coins.

Daniels, as he always has, carries the anchor of Detroit with him, the weight both a comfort and a burden. He explores race, white privilege, and factory work. Eight Mile Road, a fraught border, pulses with division, and the echoes of music, singing through Detroit's soiled but solid heart, resonate in these poems. His first long poem in many years, "Gun/Shy," centers the book. Through the personas of several characters, Daniels dives into America's gun culture and the violent gulf between the fearful and the feared.

Throughout, he seeks connection in likely and unlikely places: a river rising after spring rain and searchlights crossing the night sky. Comets and cloudy skies. Cement ponds and the Garden of Eden. Adolescence and death. Wounds physical and psychic. Disguises and more disguises. These are the myths we memorize to help us sleep at night, those that keep us awake and trembling. Daniels's accessible language, subtlety, and deftness make this collection one that belongs on every poetry reader's shelf.

1138767735
Gun/Shy
Poems that seek stability in family and community while coping with a country full of conflict and change.

The poems in Gun/Shy deal with the emotional weight of making do. Tinged with both the regrets and wisdom of aging, Jim Daniels's poems measure the wages of love in a changing world with its vanishing currency. He explores the effects of family work—putting children to bed, leading parents to their final resting places—and what is lost and gained in those exertions. Childhood and adolescence are examined, through both looking back on his own childhood and on that of his children. While his personal death count rises, Daniels reflects on his own mortality. He finds solace in small miracles—his mother stretching the budget to feed five children with "hamburger surprise" and potato skins, his children collecting stones and crabapples as if they were gold coins.

Daniels, as he always has, carries the anchor of Detroit with him, the weight both a comfort and a burden. He explores race, white privilege, and factory work. Eight Mile Road, a fraught border, pulses with division, and the echoes of music, singing through Detroit's soiled but solid heart, resonate in these poems. His first long poem in many years, "Gun/Shy," centers the book. Through the personas of several characters, Daniels dives into America's gun culture and the violent gulf between the fearful and the feared.

Throughout, he seeks connection in likely and unlikely places: a river rising after spring rain and searchlights crossing the night sky. Comets and cloudy skies. Cement ponds and the Garden of Eden. Adolescence and death. Wounds physical and psychic. Disguises and more disguises. These are the myths we memorize to help us sleep at night, those that keep us awake and trembling. Daniels's accessible language, subtlety, and deftness make this collection one that belongs on every poetry reader's shelf.

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Gun/Shy

Gun/Shy

by Jim Daniels
Gun/Shy

Gun/Shy

by Jim Daniels

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Overview

Poems that seek stability in family and community while coping with a country full of conflict and change.

The poems in Gun/Shy deal with the emotional weight of making do. Tinged with both the regrets and wisdom of aging, Jim Daniels's poems measure the wages of love in a changing world with its vanishing currency. He explores the effects of family work—putting children to bed, leading parents to their final resting places—and what is lost and gained in those exertions. Childhood and adolescence are examined, through both looking back on his own childhood and on that of his children. While his personal death count rises, Daniels reflects on his own mortality. He finds solace in small miracles—his mother stretching the budget to feed five children with "hamburger surprise" and potato skins, his children collecting stones and crabapples as if they were gold coins.

Daniels, as he always has, carries the anchor of Detroit with him, the weight both a comfort and a burden. He explores race, white privilege, and factory work. Eight Mile Road, a fraught border, pulses with division, and the echoes of music, singing through Detroit's soiled but solid heart, resonate in these poems. His first long poem in many years, "Gun/Shy," centers the book. Through the personas of several characters, Daniels dives into America's gun culture and the violent gulf between the fearful and the feared.

Throughout, he seeks connection in likely and unlikely places: a river rising after spring rain and searchlights crossing the night sky. Comets and cloudy skies. Cement ponds and the Garden of Eden. Adolescence and death. Wounds physical and psychic. Disguises and more disguises. These are the myths we memorize to help us sleep at night, those that keep us awake and trembling. Daniels's accessible language, subtlety, and deftness make this collection one that belongs on every poetry reader's shelf.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814348789
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Publication date: 08/31/2021
Series: Made in Michigan Writers Series
Pages: 96
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

A native of Detroit, Jim Daniels currently lives in Pittsburgh and is the Thomas S. Baker University Professor Emeritus at Carnegie Mellon. His recent books include Rowing Inland (Wayne State University Press, 2017) and The Perp Walk. He also coedited the anthology RESPECT: The Poetry of Detroit Music.

Table of Contents

Unwritten Laws of Gravitational Isolation 1

1 Hamburger Surprise

Sunday Best 5

My Mother at the Sewing Machine 7

Stuffing the Birds, Carnegie Natural History Museum 8

Potato Skins 9

Returning the Stones 11

My Father Worked 800 Hours of Overtime 12

Wasting My Life, 3:00 a.m. 15

The New Math 16

Bahia Honda, Key West 18

I Love Watching Rivers 20

Fog on the Turnpike 21

Hamburger Surprise 22

2 Street View

Shouting a Sonnet into Detroit's Dead Microphone 27

Searchlights 28

Legendary Toads 29

The Year of Burning 31

Between Double Doors 34

On a Personal Level 36

Midnight Football 38

Harlem Globetrotters, Olympia Stadium 40

Abandoned School in the Rain 43

Still Life with Phone Booth 44

Phone Booth, Eight Mile and Ryan 45

Google Maps: Street View 46

3 Gun/Shy

Gun/Shy 51

4 Leaving the Piano Behind

Fishing in the Cement Pond 63

Strawberries and Mirrors 65

My Daughter Turned Thirteen Today 67

Private Room 69

Test Bomb Fallout 70

Poison Control 71

Music of the Light Timer 74

Leaving the Piano Behind 75

Hale Bopp 76

5 The Grand Design

My Mother Advises Me to Get a Mani/Pedi 81

The Wound Doctor 83

High School Diploma, 1917 86

Declaring Bankruptcy 87

First Week Back After Stent 89

Annual Checkup with Money Specialist 91

Miracles 92

Spanning 94

The Secret Agent Briefcase 95

Honorary Honor 97

Property Value 98

Neighbor Down on Bridge 99

Empty Nest 100

Ripe Serviceberries 101

Tying My Shoe at the New Pornographers Concert 102

Final Miracle Before Retiring from Slowpitch 104

The Grand Design 105

Acknowledgments 109

What People are Saying About This

Patricia Jabbeh Wesley of Praise Song for My Children: New and Selected Poems

Daniels' Gun/Shy is a journey. It is not just a book of poems, but a long journey from his childhood home of Warren and Detroit to adulthood, where somewhere along this long journey, the city evolved even as the author or we all evolved. There is something profound about Jim Daniels' ability to humble us through poetry that is self-effacing at a moment in history where we most need to step away from ourselves in order to know the larger world outside of us. These powerful poems will make you laugh, wonder, pause, but long after you have laid the book down, deep inside your heart, they will reveal something profound about the way we all become survivors. This is an urgently necessary book coming to us at such a time.

CityPulse

Jim Daniels' newest collection of poetry, Gun/Shy (https://www.wsupress.wayne.edu/books/detail/gunshy), published by Wayne State, has Daniels at his best with his more than 50 poems covering topics as varied as his mother's hamburger surprise to race, privilege and factory work. Daniels' work has always been autobiographical in nature. All I can say about this collection of poetry is that it will bite you in the ass with its frankness.

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Thandi Weaver

In Jim Daniels' latest poetry collection "Gun Shy," life is refracted through various characters and through the poet's own experiences. Daniels explores adolescence, mortality, race and many other issues.

author of Something Sinister - Hayan Charara

Jim Daniels is one of our best chroniclers of an American past that is, for better and worse, gone. As such, his is a poetry that laments and celebrates our present moment—its people, the lives they live, the ideas they live by, and the places, people, and things they call theirs. When one of his speakers says, 'Today, / I'm just watching. Carried away,' you realize a pact has been made (between the speaker and world) and a promise fulfilled (by the poet for the reader): that these poems will carry you away, that the voice behind them 'wants to kneel on the floor / and whisper a prayer / like in the old days.' Now more than ever, we need those prayers, and these poems.

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