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94 pages, 6 1/8 x 8 inches, 2005
$16.00 paper, 0-87745-927-4, 978-0-87745-927-9
$10.00 or $16.00 e-book, 0-87745-927-4, 978-0-87745-927-9
About our e-books
Susan Wheelers narrative glamour finds occasions in unlikely places: hardware stores, Herodotus, Hollywood Squares, Flemish paintings, green stamps, and echoes of archaic and cyber speech. What at first seems cacophonous comes in the end to seem invested with a mournful dignity: that of the jangling discourse of our nation. Ledger is a treasure map for those willing to understand the journey.John Ashbery
Part narrative, part satire, part cri de coeur, Susan Wheelers densely wrought new poems are alternately hilarious and chilling in their power to evoke the terrible contradictions of daily life in our media-driven landscape. Wheeler is that rare thing among poets, a genuine cultural critic; her poems use image and allusion with such exactitude that we see the things around usfrom pop tarts to polyvinyl toilet seatsas if for the first time. Ledger is a dazzling collection.Marjorie Perloff, author of The Vienna Paradox
Susan Wheeler is an exuberant, subtle, endlessly inventive original, and Ledger marks a wonderful advance in her already vital contribution to American poetry. Best of all in Ledgers varied pleasures is The Debtor in the Convex Mirror, an intricate splendor and triumphant fusion of technique and vision.Harold Bloom, author of Where Shall Wisdom Be Found?
The many meanings of economy are the ground for the mediation and lament of Ledger, Susan Wheelers fourth book. In its Greek origins, economy referred to the stewardship of a household and, as it developed, the word also came to include aspects of government and of religious faith. Ledger places an individuals crisis of spirituality and personal stewardship, or management of her resources, against a backdrop of a culture that has focused its economy on financial gain and has misspent its own tangible and intangible resources.
Susan Wheeler is the author of the poetry collections Bag o Diamonds, which received the Norma Farber First Book Award of the Poetry Society of America and was short-listed for the Los Angeles Times Book Award; Smokes, which won the Four Way Books Award in 1998; and Source Codes. A novel, Record Palace, will be published by Graywolf Press in May 2005. Her work has appeared in seven editions of the Scribner anthology Best American Poetry as well as in the Paris Review, London Review of Books, Verse, Talisman, the New Yorker, and many other journals. On the creative writing faculties at Princeton University and the New School's graduate program, she lives in Rocky Hill, New Jersey. |
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