<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><b>Set in Alaska and Arizona, Peggy Shumaker's new and selected writing explores the wildness of land, heart, and family.</b><p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>Chosen with care, this volume represents forty years of poems and prose by Peggy Shumaker. Her distinctive cadences give voice to landscapes and people of Alaska and Arizona. This work leads us deep into what remains unresolved, savoring mysteries of heart, mind, and soul. Matters of life and death, these poems embody exuberance and struggle and generosity.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>Brilliant book! Note how often Peggy Shumaker, profoundly wise and tender poet, writes in honor of something or someone else - has there ever been a more generous soul? These poems of many decades invoke so many rich worlds of being...her elegant spirit and voice turn us all back into the more lyrical people we might be. It is her ongoing gift, and our treasure.--<b>Naomi Shihab Nye</b>, author of <i>Habibi</i> <p>Early on in Cairn, Peggy Shumaker asks: Who are we without language? And I respond: Who are we without this poet's language, a tongue that often seems to be oracle, speaking to us from a parallel world? In this treasure trove of poetry and short prose that spans decades of her writing life, Shumaker re-shapes our perception of how we move through our lives and the lives of others. As an added bonus, we're allowed behind the scenes of her collaboration with the painter Kesler Woodard, complete with the gorgeous paintings that emerged from this conversation between two consummate artists. In all her work, Shumaker grounds us in the present moment, while also allowing us to look up and see: 'The view/vast/beyond us.'--<b>Brenda Miller</b>, author of <i>Tell It Slant: Writing and Shaping Creative Nonfiction</i> <p>If you read only a single volume of poetry this year, may it be Peggy Shumaker's transcendent and luminous Cairn: New & Selected Poems. Traversing more than thirty years of the poet's life in letters, Cairn offers readers a panoply of lyric inner and outer journeys--from Arizona's deserts to Hawaii and Costa Rica's tropics to Alaska's frozen expanses and beyond. Simultaneously, Shumaker charts hauntingly resonant losses, both communal and personal, wisdom rooted in her love of nature, and myriad joys arising from the bonds of friendship and love. With a clarity and sparseness rivaling Dickinson's, the resilience and poetic mastery of Kumin, and the lucidity, honesty, and dignity of Szymborska, Shumaker proves herself to be one of this generation's most distinctive poetic voices. Treasure this urgently beautiful and necessary book, for it expresses the complexity of our lives with virtuosic skill, intimacy, and enlightenment.--<b>Maurya Simon</b>, author of <i>The Wilderness</i> and <i>Ghost Orchid</i><br><br>"Shumaker uses words like an artist uses paint. Color, meaning, innuendo and exclamation mingle, creating new colors, new nuances, new ways of seeing familiar objects. And her juxtapositions ... are extraordinary."--<b>Libbie Martin</b>, <i>The Fairbanks Daily News-Miner</i> <p>"Shumaker writes without blame, but with utter clarity and precision and story-telling skill about places on earth and our place among them--Alaska, Hawaii, the saguaro-studded desert--and about foxes, deer, swallows, who co-inhabit with . . . about the father who wanted to fly, the mother who wanted to die. . . . Whatever Shumaker touches is thick with life, death, and the blessing of her words."--<b>Alicia Ostriker</b>, author of <i>The Book of Seventy</i>, winner of the Jewish National Book Award, for<br>
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