Cracks in the Invisible: Poems (Hollis Summers Poetry Prize)
Released: May 11, 2011
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Format: Paperback, 112 pages
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Description:
Winner of the Hollis Summers Poetry Prize Florida Book Awards Gold Medal Winner Stephen Kampa’s poems are witty and restless in their pursuit of an intelligent modern faith. They range from a four-line satire of office inspirational posters to a lengthy meditation on the silence of God. The poems also revel in the prosodic possibilities of English’s high and low registers: a twenty–one line homage to Lord Byron that turns on three rhymes (one of which is “eisegesis”); a sestina whose end words include “sentimental,” “Marseilles,” and “Martian;” sapphics on the death of Ray Charles; and intricately modulated stanzas on the 1931 Spanish–language movie version of Dracula. Despite the metaphysical seriousness, there is always an undercurrent of stylistic levity ― a panoply of puns, comic rhymes, and loving misquotations of canonical literature ― that suggests comedy and tragedy are inextricably bound in human experience.
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