Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier. Sign in or sign up for free!

Become a Readings Member. Sign in or sign up for free!

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre to view your orders, change your details, or view your lists, or sign out.

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre or sign out.

Taking Our Time
Paperback

Taking Our Time

$56.99
Sign in or become a Readings Member to add this title to your wishlist.

Mark Belair’s poems describe in elegantly concise detail the particulars of his various worlds-childhood, work, adulthood, with its inherent passages into loss. But in addition to describing, his poems also inscribe those details with the emotional depth of his observations, reminding us that it’s in the revered particulars of the places we remember-shop windows, awnings curtained with rain, hospital rooms, cityscapes, dreamscapes-that the universals are revealed.Max Garland, author of The Word We Used for It, and former Poet Laureate of Wisconsin

Taking Our Time is an extraordinary and candid chronicle of how vision unfolds in the field between seeing and seeming: feeding not, / it seems, on the unseen / hay and oats but - having worked / the hard seasons true - on this soft / winter paradise. Work is the keyword here. Like Robert Frost and other New England poets before him, he puts faith in the essential fellowship between labor and vision. The poet acknowledges the syntactic and tonal demands of each perception and uses his masterful control of language to archive the way things gather… to a keen point of feeling. Each unit of meaning - sound, word, sentence, line - preserves the inviolable equilibrium of the contemplation that the poet has labored to cultivate. Belair’s moral commitment to the hard work required to reach this point makes Taking Our Time one of the most moving and rigorous contemplations of poetry’s ethical potential.

Melih Levi, Stanford University

As usual, Mark Belair pays attention to the small nudges life gives us about mortality, fear, loss, and the multiple pleasures intervening. In all, there’s the sense that what matters in life is both fleeting and incarnate as history-in stone, sounds, plaster, one’s own face. Reading these, it’s easy to look up from the page and find poetry where only prose theretofore lurked.

Anna Shapiro, author of Living on Air

Read More
In Shop
Out of stock
Shipping & Delivery

$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout

MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Kelsay Books
Date
30 October 2019
Pages
124
ISBN
9781950462254

Mark Belair’s poems describe in elegantly concise detail the particulars of his various worlds-childhood, work, adulthood, with its inherent passages into loss. But in addition to describing, his poems also inscribe those details with the emotional depth of his observations, reminding us that it’s in the revered particulars of the places we remember-shop windows, awnings curtained with rain, hospital rooms, cityscapes, dreamscapes-that the universals are revealed.Max Garland, author of The Word We Used for It, and former Poet Laureate of Wisconsin

Taking Our Time is an extraordinary and candid chronicle of how vision unfolds in the field between seeing and seeming: feeding not, / it seems, on the unseen / hay and oats but - having worked / the hard seasons true - on this soft / winter paradise. Work is the keyword here. Like Robert Frost and other New England poets before him, he puts faith in the essential fellowship between labor and vision. The poet acknowledges the syntactic and tonal demands of each perception and uses his masterful control of language to archive the way things gather… to a keen point of feeling. Each unit of meaning - sound, word, sentence, line - preserves the inviolable equilibrium of the contemplation that the poet has labored to cultivate. Belair’s moral commitment to the hard work required to reach this point makes Taking Our Time one of the most moving and rigorous contemplations of poetry’s ethical potential.

Melih Levi, Stanford University

As usual, Mark Belair pays attention to the small nudges life gives us about mortality, fear, loss, and the multiple pleasures intervening. In all, there’s the sense that what matters in life is both fleeting and incarnate as history-in stone, sounds, plaster, one’s own face. Reading these, it’s easy to look up from the page and find poetry where only prose theretofore lurked.

Anna Shapiro, author of Living on Air

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Kelsay Books
Date
30 October 2019
Pages
124
ISBN
9781950462254