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Book Cover for: Blue Hour, Carolyn Forche

Blue Hour

Carolyn Forche

"Blue Hour is an elusive book, because it is ever in pursuit of what the German poet Novalis called 'the [lost] presence beyond appearance.' The longest poem, 'On Earth, ' is a transcription of mind passing from life into death, in the form of an abecedary, modeled on ancient gnostic hymns. Other poems in the book, especially 'Nocturne' and 'Blue Hour, ' are lyric recoveries of the act of remembering, though the objects of memory seem to us vivid and irretrievable, the rage to summon and cling at once fierce and distracted.

"The voice we hear in Blue Hour is a voice both very young and very old. It belongs to someone who has seen everything and who strives imperfectly, desperately, to be equal to what she has seen. The hunger to know is matched here by a desire to be new, totally without cynicism, open to the shocks of experience as if perpetually for the first time, though unillusioned, wise beyond any possible taint of a false or assumed innocence."

-- Robert Boyers

Book Details

  • Publisher: Harper Perennial
  • Publish Date: Dec 13rd, 2013
  • Pages: 73
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.28in - 6.14in - 0.29in - 0.32lb
  • EAN: 9780060099138
  • Categories: American - GeneralWomen AuthorsSubjects & Themes - Death, Grief, Loss

About the Author

Forche, Carolyn: -

Carolyn Forché is the author of Gathering the Tribes, winner of the Yale Younger Poets Award; The Country Between Us, which received awards from the Academy of American Poets and the Poetry Society of America; and The Angel of History, awarded the Los Angeles Times Book Award. She is also the editor of the anthology Against Forgetting: Twentieth-Centuly Poetry of Witness. Recently she was presented with the Edita and Ira Morris Hiroshima Foundation Award for Peace and Culture in Stockholm. She lives in Maryland with her husband and son.

Praise for this book

"Forché, already a master of imagery, creates here a masterwork for the 21st century." -- Jane Miller

"Again Carolyn Forche hovers above the lacerated landscape of history filling the holes 'between saying and said.' BLUE HOUR does not console but emboldens. The fear we share is never dodged. This singular voice is writ in bone, snow, coal, stone and sorrow." -- C.D. Wright

"And now comes a stunning new work by Carolyn Forche, my hero, because not only does she write beautifully, she has fierce moral principles." -- --Carolyn Kizer

"To read these poems is an experience as calmly and restfully beautiful as looking at a group of related impressionist canvases, like those of Monet. Especially memorable for me are poems like 'Refuge' and above all, the long poem 'On Earth'" -- -- John Bayley

"The long poem 'On Earth' immediately draws the reader's attention--it's such a mysterious catalogue of all the things we know and don't know: an uncanny mixture of peace, beauty and cruelty. If you ask 'which country is it?' the answer is 'this country is called earth." -- --Adam Zagajewski

"Unflinching witness and eloquent mourner." -- The New Yorker

"An eerily beautiful, bruised and persuasive book." -- Los Angeles Times Book Review

"BLUE HOUR blends domestic tenderness with philosophical reverie ... It is full of tiny startling detail ... celebrating the freedom of imagination and memory." -- Financial Times

"A ferocious remembering in the face of death, in the face of life." -- North American Review

"Resplendent and solemn ... takes readers to similar state of limbo, someplace between the conscious and the intuited." -- Hartford Courant

"Like the scatter from a fireworks explosion, Forché's images float on the currents of the reader's memory." -- American Book Review

"Dense, lyrical, mysterious ... a poetic journey no reader should miss." -- Library Journal

" [An] austerely beautiful gathering of elegiac meditations ... Forché [is] a writer exquisitely attuned to the tenderness and awe, violence and grief inherent in human life." -- Booklist