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Bird Conjuring: Good omen, like a sudden appearance of birds, or just an inordinate urge to ascend. The ancients knew words to be magic vehicles that when spoken or, better yet, sung with intention and intensity, could amend or alter trends and events. The power of the word. Seeking origins and consonances led to shaman songs and incantations, charms and spells where words are tools of transformation and healing. There are resonances too with gnomic verses and riddles, aphorisms and adages. The black soil of the primordial. Drawn by an insistent urge toward utterance, David Cloutier's poems…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Bird Conjuring: Good omen, like a sudden appearance of birds, or just an inordinate urge to ascend. The ancients knew words to be magic vehicles that when spoken or, better yet, sung with intention and intensity, could amend or alter trends and events. The power of the word. Seeking origins and consonances led to shaman songs and incantations, charms and spells where words are tools of transformation and healing. There are resonances too with gnomic verses and riddles, aphorisms and adages. The black soil of the primordial. Drawn by an insistent urge toward utterance, David Cloutier's poems emerge, unspooling meaning within meaning, image on image, one with its sonic architecture. The aural qualities of words become an arena, or better, playground. He says, "Poems are like dust, evidence of some decades' walking." Chronologically arranged (mostly), Bird Conjuring has five sections: Another Time, Tracks of the Dead, Other Lights, Pinnacles and Others, and Nightscripts, each with a focus or concern. There are several long poem sequences, opening horizons. Whatever else, this poetry tracks an inner direction along another axis of meaning. Bird Conjuring evokes, invokes and lays a humble claim to the legacy of orphic utterance: poem-making (poesis, to make).
Autorenporträt
David Cloutier grew up in New England. He pursued creative and cultural studies and graduated from Brown University with an M.A. in Creative Writing. Always a poet, he has worked as a teacher, literary publisher, arts council director, and festival producer in California, New Mexico, North Carolina and Rhode Island. Notably, he created and directed the Monterey World Music Festival (1997-2003), in an effort to expand global cultural awareness. He has translated poems by several 20th century French poets including Jean Laude and Claude Esteban. Additionally, in his search for poetic origins and consonances, he compiled several volumes of the oral poetry of the world. A seeker, sometimes finder, he lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico, with Carolyn Burns, psychotherapist.