Wayward Lines

Poetry. Life is no lightweight thing, "we are reborn in our heavy steps, our secrets zippered shut on our backs." Our humanity, our bodies, is where we find ourselves in these poems, in the drama, in the finality of acceptance and self- determination, at the edge in which we burn white hot. The inward entanglement of two bodies strong in love, in leaving, in struggle, emotions and feelings, thick, palpable, and wonderment too…whatever it is we experience, the body is the doorway, the body pushing against gravity, pulled by its own vision, needs and desires, "our secrets"…leave us with "mud up to our ankles." Love, in Wayward Lines, is fathoms into the quick, leaving the shallows of fantasy, romance. The body is our connection, here is breath, teeth, throat, mouth, tongue, arms, skin…eyes throb, our backs carry the world and our dreams, "hands full of dark." The body, life, is its own hunger and the beauty, even when we feel broken. These are poems of relationship, of home…and traversing the impossible as we feel every inch of it.
1122273914
Wayward Lines

Poetry. Life is no lightweight thing, "we are reborn in our heavy steps, our secrets zippered shut on our backs." Our humanity, our bodies, is where we find ourselves in these poems, in the drama, in the finality of acceptance and self- determination, at the edge in which we burn white hot. The inward entanglement of two bodies strong in love, in leaving, in struggle, emotions and feelings, thick, palpable, and wonderment too…whatever it is we experience, the body is the doorway, the body pushing against gravity, pulled by its own vision, needs and desires, "our secrets"…leave us with "mud up to our ankles." Love, in Wayward Lines, is fathoms into the quick, leaving the shallows of fantasy, romance. The body is our connection, here is breath, teeth, throat, mouth, tongue, arms, skin…eyes throb, our backs carry the world and our dreams, "hands full of dark." The body, life, is its own hunger and the beauty, even when we feel broken. These are poems of relationship, of home…and traversing the impossible as we feel every inch of it.
15.0 In Stock
Wayward Lines

Wayward Lines

by Ariana D Den Bleyker
Wayward Lines

Wayward Lines

by Ariana D Den Bleyker

Paperback

$15.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview


Poetry. Life is no lightweight thing, "we are reborn in our heavy steps, our secrets zippered shut on our backs." Our humanity, our bodies, is where we find ourselves in these poems, in the drama, in the finality of acceptance and self- determination, at the edge in which we burn white hot. The inward entanglement of two bodies strong in love, in leaving, in struggle, emotions and feelings, thick, palpable, and wonderment too…whatever it is we experience, the body is the doorway, the body pushing against gravity, pulled by its own vision, needs and desires, "our secrets"…leave us with "mud up to our ankles." Love, in Wayward Lines, is fathoms into the quick, leaving the shallows of fantasy, romance. The body is our connection, here is breath, teeth, throat, mouth, tongue, arms, skin…eyes throb, our backs carry the world and our dreams, "hands full of dark." The body, life, is its own hunger and the beauty, even when we feel broken. These are poems of relationship, of home…and traversing the impossible as we feel every inch of it.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780981953465
Publisher: Raw Art Press
Publication date: 04/29/2015
Pages: 76
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.20(d)

About the Author


Ariana D. Den Bleyker is a Pittsburgh native currently residing in Upstate New York, a wife, mother of two, a writer, and an editor. She is the author of several poetry chapbooks and collections, the novelette, Finger : Knuckle : Palm, and an experimental memoir, prothesis. Ariana is also the founder of ELJ Publications, featuring a number of serials, series and contests, including Emerge Literary Journal, scissors & spackle, Amethyst Arsenic, and The J.J. Outré Review.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews