Sprawl: Poems

Sprawl: Poems

by Andrew Collard
Sprawl: Poems

Sprawl: Poems

by Andrew Collard

Paperback

$17.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview


Sprawl is a reconstruction of the constantly shifting landscape of metropolitan Detroit, which extends over six counties and is home to over four million people, from the perspective of a single parent raising a young child amid financial precarity. Part memoir, part invention, the book is Andrew Collard’s attempt to reconcile the tenderness and sense of purpose found in the parent-child relationship with ongoing societal crises in the empire of the automobile. Here, a mansion may contrast with a burned-out home just up the street. How does one construct a sense of place in such a landscape, where once-familiar neighborhoods turn to strip malls or empty lots and the relationships that root us dissolve? Sprawl suggests that there is solace in recognizing that when we ask this question, we are never alone in asking. Within the larger geographical space of the metropolis are the in-between places of personal significance: the gas stations, burger joints, malls, and parking lots where many of the defining moments of ordinary lives occur. These poems take deep inspiration from such places, insisting on the value of the people found there, along with their experiences. What might be considered high and low culture are as inextricably linked in the formal cues of the poems as they are in the Michigan landscape, influenced by pop music, midcentury modern aesthetics, comic books, and cars. While the sprawl of the title refers to the seemingly endless succession of businesses and neighborhoods extending north from Detroit (“a sprawl this extensive breeds / empty pockets”), it also invokes the sprawl of history through poems that move between the past and present. One sequence of poems built on old newspaper clippings draws attention to a Chrysler plant that once constructed Redstone missiles. Elsewhere, two poems refer to the Detroit newspaper strike of the 1990s, a local controversy with lasting implications for the community. Sprawl ultimately illuminates the relationship of one place to other places, contextualizing its characters and locales within a wider societal frame.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780821425282
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Publication date: 03/28/2023
Series: Hollis Summers Poetry Prize
Pages: 94
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.40(d)

About the Author


Andrew Collard’s poems have appeared in Ploughshares, AGNI, Virginia Quarterly Review, Best New Poets, and elsewhere. He currently lives in Grand Rapids, Michigan, with his son and their cats.

Table of Contents


Diorama 1 Future Ruins Perpetual Motion 5 Quizzo Night at The Red Ox 7 Cicada Song 10 Pax Americana 11 Autotopia 13 Future Ruins 14 Wartime, Rally’s Drive-In 17 Carried 19 Clippings: Sterling Assembly Plant 23 Where the Birds Went Crawling Backwards 27 The Nest 28 Unpunctuated Days 29 Elegy for the Dymaxion Car 31 Autotopia 34 They Say King’s Forest Boulevard Is Healing 35 Sub-pastoral 37 After News of a Border Shutdown, I Venture Out for Fries 39 Clippings: Sterling Assembly Plant 43 Sprawl Gas & Food 47 Key Motor Mall 49 On the Demolition of Produce Kingdom 51 Telway Lament 53 Autotopia 56 Badlands Flashback 57 Night Music 59 Commute 61 Clippings: Sterling Assembly Plant 65 How to Be Held Church can be a word for anywhere 69 Landscape with Ryegrass and Hunger 71 Idyll 73 City of Windows 74 Night Cycle 77 Autotopia 78 To My Son Henry, Asleep in the Next Room 80 Dear leasing office, dear oil slick 82 Acknowledgments 85 Notes and Dedications 87
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews