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There isn't a false note in this book. Gardner is so completely present in each of her many settings, including the ones inside herself that we, the readers, can't be anywhere but with her. It's beautiful too that she doesn't try to tie a bow around what she's done, but instead leaves us with "not yet" and the hope that, some day, she'll go on.-Lola Haskins In these rich poems, the poet takes us as her travel companion as she journeys through places, memories, and ancestral musings on a quest for significance and self. Sometimes, she becomes like a librarian tracing obscure references,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
There isn't a false note in this book. Gardner is so completely present in each of her many settings, including the ones inside herself that we, the readers, can't be anywhere but with her. It's beautiful too that she doesn't try to tie a bow around what she's done, but instead leaves us with "not yet" and the hope that, some day, she'll go on.-Lola Haskins In these rich poems, the poet takes us as her travel companion as she journeys through places, memories, and ancestral musings on a quest for significance and self. Sometimes, she becomes like a librarian tracing obscure references, sometimes like a naturalist hunting specimens in bodies of water and stretches of forest, sometimes like a person on a spiritual scavenger hunt. These are poems of loss and retrieval, of finding your way.-Sheila Ortiz-Taylor
Autorenporträt
A native of coastal Maine, Joann Gardner's poems have appeared in such journals as Tampa Review, South Carolina Review, Barrow Street, Cimarron Review and Louisiana Literature. Her chapbook La Florida won the Weldon Kees Prize and The Deaf Island won the 2018 chapbook prize from the Poetry Society of America. She divides her time between Florida and Maine.