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In Black Drum, Enid Shomer fuses mind with body, knowledge with physical being, and affirms the capacity of language to accomplish this fusion. With clearly fashioned images, her focus often narrows on close particulars or leaps to wide angles, as in these lines from the title poem in which the narrator is battling a fish: We had been struggling for ten minutes--a lifetime--over whose world > edges and continuous center, or mine with its yin and yang, its surface incised into sky and sea, the land like a scar between. The characters in Shomer's poems discover the ceaseless motion of living in…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In Black Drum, Enid Shomer fuses mind with body, knowledge with physical being, and affirms the capacity of language to accomplish this fusion. With clearly fashioned images, her focus often narrows on close particulars or leaps to wide angles, as in these lines from the title poem in which the narrator is battling a fish: We had been struggling for ten minutes--a lifetime--over whose world > edges and continuous center, or mine with its yin and yang, its surface incised into sky and sea, the land like a scar between. The characters in Shomer's poems discover the ceaseless motion of living in the body and the inevitability of decay. In "Notes from the Sketch book of Gustav Klimt," Shomer boldly says, "I have always balked / at the purely decorative, / but then I saw that the symbolic / could stir us by its absence." Black Drum insists that life on earth speaks of transformation and transience; epiphany can happen any where, with "schemes illegal and grand" with slot machines, race horses, dead or estranged relatives, and lost love. Enid Shomer signals us to make the most of life, despite our limitations and in the face of bewildering catastrophe.
Autorenporträt
Recipient of two grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and three from the Florida Arts Council, Enid Shomer is the author of two previous books of poetry, including This Close to the Earth. She has also written a collection of short fiction, Imaginary Men, which won both the Iowa Fiction Award and the Southern Review and L.S.U. Short Fiction Award. Her work has appeared in the Atlantic, the New Yorker, Poetry, the New Criterion, Best American Poetry, and many other magazines and periodicals. Shomer lives in Florida and New York City.