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Pacific Light

David Mason

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Red Hen Press img Link Publisher

Belletristik / Lyrik, Dramatik

Beschreibung

David Mason was born in Washington State, forty-odd degrees north latitude, and now lives on the Australian island of Tasmania, forty-odd degrees south latitude. That Pacific crossing is the work of a lifetime of devotion and change. The rich new poems of Pacific Light explore the implications of the light as well as peace and its opposing forces. What does it mean to be an immigrant and face the ultimate borders of our lives? How can we say the word home and mean it? These questions have obsessed Mason in his major narrative works, The Country I Remember and Ludlow, as well as his lyric and dramatic writing. Pacific Light is a culmination and a deepening of that work, a book of transformations, history and love, endurance and unfathomable beauty, by a poet “at the height of his powers.”

Rezensionen

> The Woven Table</a> </p> <p></p>
<p>The sonic pleasures of David Mason’s&#xa0;<em>Pacific Light&#xa0;</em>carried me swiftly through this stunningly crafted collection. Each poem is at its best read aloud, the accomplished rhythms emerging as a lilt and ease, a physical pleasure of the human mouth and lungs. These stories, meditations, monologues, and love songs slowly develop an expansive vision of the natural world in which the speaker is observer and participant, a brushstroke in the painting, forever in relationship to memory, to history, and to the Earth. What emerges across these poems is a full life lived in communion; what emerges across these poems is wisdom.&#xa0;<br>—Jason Schneiderman, author of&#xa0;<em>Hold Me Tight<br><br></em>As a poet of America’s Pacific Northwest, David Mason has found its mirror reflection in Australia’s Southeast. Turned upside down by love, he has learned “to walk upright under the Southern Cross.” Generously, he extends his feeling of renewal to all of us and urges us “to let all discovery / teach us to love the globe, that troubled child.” In&#xa0;<em>Pacific Light</em>, David Mason, one of our indispensable poets, shares his discovery of a new world—and amazingly, it turns out to be this one.<br>—Mark Jarman, author of&#xa0;<em>Dailiness</em>&#xa0;and&#xa0;<em>The Heronry<br><br></em>In the last stanza of the last poem in David Mason’s startling and soulful new book of poems,&#xa0;<em>Pacific Light</em>, the poet writes:</p> <p>The effort of a life, the wasted hour,<br>the kind word given to a stranger’s child<br>are understood as kin and disappear.<br>Time to be grass again. Ongoing. Wild.</p> <p> </p> <p>This stanza testifies to last things: the last journey, the last shape shifting, the last immigration in a book filled with such arrivals and departures. The formal rigor of the poems—handled with an easy and almost offhand poise—only accentuates the sense of almost constant movement, which is at the heart of the book. This book is the story of a life's deepening and reconfiguration. As such, it both inspires and challenges the reader in ways that only poetry can do. What a pleasure to read a book of poems by a poet at the height of his powers, a poet whose life has been transformed and whose poems are the embodiment of that transformation.<br>—Jim Moore, author of&#xa0;<em>Underground: New and Selected Poems</em></p> <p><br></p> <p>David Mason wrote for&#xa0;<a href="https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/performing-is-learning-a-teachers-memoir/#comments">LARB</a></p> <p>David Mason wrote for <a href="https://online.flipbuilder.com/eovs/snaf/"

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Schlagwörter

Immigration, Youth, Dream, Violence and Peace, Pacific Ring of Fire, Tasmania Sea, Australia Pacific Northwest, History, Light, Poetry, Work, Beauty, Stoicism, Transformation Change, Age, Love