Glad Wilderness
Geraldine Cannon
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In Glad Wilderness
Geraldine Cannon has woven an Appalachian tapestry of voices and images
that are somehow at once clear as a swimming hole and as suggestive as
an impressionist painting: "His skin develops Braille as he breathes
me in." Her mode is not formal until the end of the series where she
has written three triolets, of all things, that are three of the best
triolets I have ever read. Completely unexpected, and perfectly delightful.
Lewis Turco, Poet/Scholar, author of The
Book of Forms, 3rd ed. (University Press
of New England, 2000)
Geraldine Cannon's many voices in this collection form a choir, each poem a soloist
in turn, while the others hum and clap around it. In the virtuosic story-telling
of her Southern personae, a world comes vibrantly into focus. In addition to
her narrative gifts, Cannon gives us imagery that stuns with its originality
and its rightness. Here is the marvelous close of the first poem in the book: "We
are left / with so many wrinkles / if we could spread our skin out, / we could
glide."
Susan Ludvigson, Poet, author of Escaping
the House of Certainty: Poems (Louisiana
State University Press, 2006)
Geraldine Cannon relies confidently on adroit observation and direct language
unadorned by rarified reference or elaborate trope. She sees, she feels, she
helps us home, to refresh ourselves with uncanny gladness in a wilderness of
new experience. Time and again her poems lift us into the affecting and infectious
realization of poetry's power to create "Unmeasured Time" and say to us, as her
wise voice often does, "I am as full of wonder now as you."
Michael Heffernan, Poet, author of The
Night Breeze off the Ocean: Poems (Eastern
Washington University Press, 2005)
ISBN: 978-1-891386-45-9
84 pgs, $14.95

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