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Renaming the Streets : Poems

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Stone is not only a valuable physician, but a poet who is able to get his outstanding qualities of imagination and formal technique into a relationship that produces poems of great human value. - James DickeyRenaming the Streets, John Stone's third book of poems, is a work that speaks to the future but remains mindful of the endless intersection of the past and present.

Stone writes about the human experience in all its seasons: if there is suffering, pain, loneliness, there is also love, mercy, humor, and, always, a sense of wonder.

In ""Rosemary,"" Stone describes the vulnerability of a traveler who falls half in love with a coffee-shop waitress.

When, in ""The Bass,"" a city clicker takes his son fishing and they unexpectedly catch a fish, there is not only high humor, but at the end, a sudden contemplative tone:That fish won for us a trophy which I keep here on my desk to remind me of that morning and ofhow unexpected the end may b ehow hungry how shiningRenaming the Steets is notable for its explorations within form: prose vignettes and a sonnet sequence are side by side.

In the latter, the astonishing feats of the homing pigeon take on metaphorical depth:Its house as handsome as a Henry Moore a prisoner in the rounded sleep of egg . . . But then the chipping chisel of its beak, a burglar on the perfect inside job, and with a novice's display of cheek what began as instinct ends as squab. Renaming the Streets is a book of cycles and circuits.

The work is all of a piece, the voice that of a mature and meticulous craftsman, a distinguished presence in American poetry.

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Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
0807112712 / 9780807112717
Hardback
811.54
30/11/1985
United States
49 pages
140 x 216 mm
Undergraduate Learn More
DC Poetry