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Book Cover for: Blessing the House, Jim Daniels

Blessing the House

Jim Daniels

Jim Daniels' Blessing the House visits the sites of domestic faith - Catholic schools, sex and marriage, childbirth - in an attempt to witness a world worth believing in. In their search for hope, grace, and decency in the small dramas of an individual life, these poems become larger, more overtly political and express a genuine interest in human emotion.

Book Details

  • Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
  • Publish Date: Mar 6th, 1997
  • Pages: 120
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.95in - 5.97in - 0.36in - 0.47lb
  • EAN: 9780822956365
  • Categories: • American - General

About the Author

Jim Daniels has published four books of poetry, as well as six chapbooks. He has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, and has been awarded a Pushcart Prize. A native of Detroit, Daniels is currently a professor of English at Carnegie Mellon University, where he directs the creative writing program.

Praise for this book

[Daniels's] talent remains as strong and defiant as ever. . . . What appeals to me most in these new poems is how Daniels experiences the world he moves in and through. He feels it with his entire self.-- "Carnegie Magazine"
Daniels' strength lies in his ability to be simple and complex, sensuous and spiritual, social and private as he searches for 'faith.' . . . Through literate, unpretentious language, [his] lines reflect the complexities of parenting and religion.-- "In Pittsburgh"
Reflecting upon death and our ability to move on after the initial shock, these poems resonate with meaning not only for the individual self, but for society at large. . . . Daniels manages "to overcome the paradox of the death of too many and the pain of so many more, yet to still continue as if existence made any sense at all.-- "Poetry International"
The book's power lies in its generous, stable sense of moral gravity--with its author not preaching above us but working things out beside us.-- "Pittsburgh Post-Gazette"
These are tender, moving, and nostalgic poems about an American life, beautifully wrought and vividly close to the experience of all of us born in small towns.-- "Carolyn Kizer"
Daniels searches through the darkness of his past with the revealing flashlight of his language. He shows how what was is still turning in his life; he shares the echoes he hears; he sways in the circles of time, and with him we discover the still burning ashes of memory. . . . What is so appealing about Daniels's poetry is its vividness and immediacy, his arrangement of details that make the scenes, the characters, the memories come alive.-- "West Branch"