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In
addition to portraying Red Pollard, Leaning In depicts the poet's
passionate youth and turbulent later years. The poems are informed by
unbridled grief and ecstasy, as well as fascination with the natural world.
Laura Hillenbrand writes, "In Leaning In, Norah Pollard has
created a work of singular radiance, an elegant, truthful, resonant
collection. It should be read, re-read, and remembered." And
this from poet Gray Jacobik: "The most heartbreaking poetry seems to
require true heartbreak to inform it -- would there were a less expensive way
to make art. The poems in Norah Pollard's Leaning In have spared her,
and us, nothing of life's emotional and spiritual extractions. 'Essential
Oils -- are wrung,' as Dickinson would have it. In skillful, compassionate,
wise, and unflinching poems, we're reminded that the works that touch us most
deeply are unself-conscious in their strategies, revelatory in their
authenticity, and 'cost' the most to make. Fortunately, when we surrender to
them, the rewards, as here with Pollard, are inestimable." Ms.
Pollard has read her work widely at venues such as Yale University, and she
has recently recorded a CD of twenty-six poems in the
book. Click
here to read sample poems from Leaning In. At
various points in her life, Norah Pollard has been a folk singer, waitress,
nanny, teacher, solderer, and print shop calligrapher. She currently works
for a Bridgeport steel company. In 1983 she received the Academy of American
Poets Prize from the University of Bridgeport, and for several years was
editor of The Connecticut River Review. She lives in Stratford,
Connecticut. Other
praise for Leaning In: "Norah
Pollard has translated a harrowing, yearning lifetime into imagery-rich poems
of despair and wild flings. 'A dreamy stir of dust motes / and you'll sense
the silent others in the shadows / attending.' Pollard gives us crystal fire dogs, racing horses,
Narragansett dark, parakeets which are 'green pieces flying gorgeously / in
twelve directions.' This is really splendid poetry from many years of writing
with beautiful care." - Dick Allen "I
was not surprised to learn that Norah Pollard is the daughter of Red Pollard,
Seabiscuit's jockey, for in her poems as in her life, she shares her father's
wry wit, total honesty, and passion for adventure." - Rennie McQuilkin The
Boox Review (on line, 9/20/03) calls Norah Pollard’s poems “exquisitely
intimate, deftly rendered delights” and says that they “not only illuminate
the power of love but the power in truth as well.”
The cover of Leaning In was adapted from this watercolor of the Connecticut River by Norah Pollard's uncle, Eugene Conlon. He produced some twenty studies of the same scene under many different conditions. This one was painted in late spring. Ms. Pollard has a second book of poems entitled Report from the Banana Hospital. Click here to read about this book. |
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BOOK STATISTICS ISBN: 0-9662783-6-4 $16.00US
($16.00 Canada) or buy with PayPal
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$16.00US ($16.00 Canada) |
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