The Primitive Observatory
The poems of The Primitive Observatory, set roughly in the Gilded Age, take readers into a dreamy, alluring world where hapless travelers, doomed heirs, and other colorful types grapple with horrors. Within the pages of this book, we find a group of cousins who wager their pets in endless games of mahjong, a village whose inhabitants all dream the same dreams, and Maurice, who watches Greta Garbo movies while waiting for death in the macabre home of his grandfather, a man suspected of sinister hypnosis and unspeakable crimes.
 
Kimbrell explores such themes as memory, class prejudice, family violence, and greed in a flamboyant, yet matter-of-fact style to create verse that is both amusing and unsettling. Combining prose that evokes H. P. Lovecraft, classical mythology, and Marcel Proust with the look and taut line of traditional formalist verse, the poems appear on the page as perfect rectangles, yet revel in narrative and linguistic absurdities.
 
The Primitive Observatory offers a dark and evocative experience through the tangible grotesque. Fans of David Lynch, Franz Kafka, Edward Gorey and the like will be startled, excited, and pleased by this entertaining and disturbing book of poetry.
1122108616
The Primitive Observatory
The poems of The Primitive Observatory, set roughly in the Gilded Age, take readers into a dreamy, alluring world where hapless travelers, doomed heirs, and other colorful types grapple with horrors. Within the pages of this book, we find a group of cousins who wager their pets in endless games of mahjong, a village whose inhabitants all dream the same dreams, and Maurice, who watches Greta Garbo movies while waiting for death in the macabre home of his grandfather, a man suspected of sinister hypnosis and unspeakable crimes.
 
Kimbrell explores such themes as memory, class prejudice, family violence, and greed in a flamboyant, yet matter-of-fact style to create verse that is both amusing and unsettling. Combining prose that evokes H. P. Lovecraft, classical mythology, and Marcel Proust with the look and taut line of traditional formalist verse, the poems appear on the page as perfect rectangles, yet revel in narrative and linguistic absurdities.
 
The Primitive Observatory offers a dark and evocative experience through the tangible grotesque. Fans of David Lynch, Franz Kafka, Edward Gorey and the like will be startled, excited, and pleased by this entertaining and disturbing book of poetry.
11.99 In Stock
The Primitive Observatory

The Primitive Observatory

by Gregory Kimbrell
The Primitive Observatory

The Primitive Observatory

by Gregory Kimbrell

eBook

$11.99 

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Overview

The poems of The Primitive Observatory, set roughly in the Gilded Age, take readers into a dreamy, alluring world where hapless travelers, doomed heirs, and other colorful types grapple with horrors. Within the pages of this book, we find a group of cousins who wager their pets in endless games of mahjong, a village whose inhabitants all dream the same dreams, and Maurice, who watches Greta Garbo movies while waiting for death in the macabre home of his grandfather, a man suspected of sinister hypnosis and unspeakable crimes.
 
Kimbrell explores such themes as memory, class prejudice, family violence, and greed in a flamboyant, yet matter-of-fact style to create verse that is both amusing and unsettling. Combining prose that evokes H. P. Lovecraft, classical mythology, and Marcel Proust with the look and taut line of traditional formalist verse, the poems appear on the page as perfect rectangles, yet revel in narrative and linguistic absurdities.
 
The Primitive Observatory offers a dark and evocative experience through the tangible grotesque. Fans of David Lynch, Franz Kafka, Edward Gorey and the like will be startled, excited, and pleased by this entertaining and disturbing book of poetry.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780809334810
Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press
Publication date: 02/24/2016
Series: Crab Orchard Series in Poetry
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 70
File size: 818 KB

About the Author

Gregory Kimbrell’s poems have appeared in Blackbird, the Laurel Review and the Abaculi Project. Kimbrell is the events and programs coordinator for Virginia Commonwealth University Libraries.

Table of Contents

Cover Title Page Copyright Contents Acknowledgments Part One Interview at the Fox and Lantern The Fire That Cleared the Valley of Oster The Succulent Flowers The Lost Psychotherapist Nocturne (Mouths of the Urns) The Turn of the Weather Vane The Order of Silence The Quarantine The Passing Brigade Part Two The Blizzard The Burial Plot Nocturne (Craters of the Moon) The Remote District The Hour of Study; or, The Concept of Moral Genealogy First Buds on the Rowan Highway Nocturne (Wind from the Hills) The Monster of Barlow The Diplomats The Next Palace Part Three The Goat God Hotel Vitruvius Nocturne (Empty Fireplace) 1900 Gibbon Street The Age of Miracles The Marshes Nocturne (Boat at the Wayside) The Advance of the Glacier The Fog The Barrier Reef Part Four In the Progress of Time The Four Cousins The Ruin at Drax End The Wall The Sluice Gate The End of Time at Four Heaths School Successor to the Late Lord Yellow Fingers The Years Underground Nocturne (Tremors of the Earth) The Coming Winter Notes Other Books in the Crab Orchard Series in Poetry Back Cover
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