Book Cover

Zoom

Contributor(s): Lewis, Susan (Author)

ISBN: 9781944585181

Publisher: Word Works

Binding Types:

$17.00
$29.95 (Final Price)
$28.75 (100+ copies: $28.00)
List/retail price:
$17.00
- +
Buy

Pub Date: June 1, 2018

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.20" H x 9.00" L x 6.00" W ( 0.30 lbs) 78 pages

BISAC Categories:

Poetry | American | Women Authors

Series: Washington Prize

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: 2017 Washington Prize winner. Prose poems sizzle with the anxieties of our age and torqued wordplay, conveying our terror and our longing. Love confuses, the world crumbles, and yet! We come out on top, with a long view into a future where we have held ourselves accountable and learned not just to "fix things" but to sing.

Brief description: Susan Lewis is author of ZOOM (The Word Works, 2018), HEISENBERG'S SALON (BlazeVOX [books]), THIS VISIT (BlazeVOX [books]), and HOW TO BE ANOTHER (Červená Barva Press). Her chapbook, Commodity Fetishism, won the 2009 Červená Barva Press Chapbook Award. Her work appears in Boston Review, The Journal, Raritan, Seneca Review, and Verse Daily, among others. She lives in NYC and is the editor and publisher of Posit.

Review Quotes:

These poems should be patented for their outrageous velocity, their skin-tight turns and re-turns, their windows into a mind sharp with fever. They should not be sequestered in a tower, not hidden in a velvet box with jewelry and baby teeth. They should not be eaten whole. If eaten whole, they should be accompanied by oboes. This is absolutely one of the wildest, most tender, most sacred collections of poems in our world today. From all and every point of view, Susan Lewis creates a stunning vision that opens up our weary weeping minds to heal.

--Maureen Seaton, author of Fibonacci Batman and Tit with Blue Guitar

The way this book deploys the English language to reveal the music of deeper meaning is simply gorgeous. "In praise of miscommunication and her co-star, depending. Trying not to stare at the posterior pronation of their disregard." Reading, I was thinking of G. Hill's early prose poems, their rhetorical marvels. And, of GC Waldrep's prose poems. How beautifully the emotional registers find their way into the speech of the prose poem-format: "The enemy grinning in your prismatic heart. Fingering the molecular furnace. Hot & bothered. Throbbing towards correspondence, the irrepressible hope of fit."

--Ilya Kaminsky, author of Dancing in Odessa and Musica Humana

Zoom is a post-perspectival report on current conditions, written from the spot where the Anthropocene meets the obscene. It's a bleak, funny litany of non-viable positions - ground zero crumbling beneath flying feet. There are so many good sentences here I'm tempted to quote them: "Underestimate the risk or die trying."

--Rae Armantrout, author of Partly: New and Selected Poems and Entanglements

Worth Considering
Product successfully added to cart!