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Piece by Piece - Annotated by Rachel Hadas (Paperback)

Piece by Piece - Annotated by  Rachel Hadas (Paperback)
Store: Target
Last Price: 18.39 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>A selection of essays on literature (and life​) from the award-winning poet Rachel Hadas.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>"Rachel Hadas, one of our best poets, has once again proved herself a lively, indispensable essayist. She has spent a lifetime falling in love with books, and it shows. In <i>Piece by Piece</i> she ranges superbly from Kipling and Salinger to thirtysomething contemporary poets. Her personal essays, poignantly evoking parents and friends, are haunting and intensely memorable. Hadas is not just a wise critic, but a vigorous, highly enjoyable one too."―David Mikics, author of <i>Slow Reading in a Hurried Age</i> and <i>The Annotated Emerson</i></b> <p/>From a Corfu classroom to an Accra art gallery to a spa in Truth or Consequences, New Mexico, this collection of prose by poet Rachel Hadas ranges through space. It reaches back in time as Hadas recalls a 1950's New York City childhood "saturated with books" and long-departed parents, both of whom were teachers and deeply scholarly in different ways. In <i>Piece by Piece</i>, Hadas―who has read and written and taught and lived a life surrounded by readers, writers, and teachers―sifts through the texts and experiences of her bookish life to pass on her findings to new readers. <p/>"Writing a book review," she says in the foreword, "is only one way, and rarely the most interesting way, to engage with what one has read. I'm more interested in what happens to that book as time passes--the obliterations and transformations of memory. What and how do I recall what I've read, sometimes many years before? How, at different times in my life, did books help me?" Rich with a variety of connections in every essay or review, <i>Piece by Piece</i> is about books and about paying attention. It's about living.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><b>PRAISE FOR RACHEL HADAS: </b> <p/>[A] powerful, autumnal book.--<b><i>New York Times Book Review</b></i> on <i>The Golden Road</i> <p/>An impressively wide-ranging and compassionate book.--<b><i>Times Literary Supplement</b></i> on <i>The Golden Road</i> <p/>Exquisite, polished, cerebral, and yet filled with womanly, workaday reflections, Hadas's work reminds us that poetry is both celebration and a craft to be honed carefully.--<b><i>Library Journal</b></i> on <i>Halfway Down the Hall</i> <p/>The internal paths and landscapes mapped by Hadas are often eerily alluring, her use of repetition and caesura beckoning the reader on. Threading and webs bind the collection, and it's difficult not to get caught up in Hadas's dark incantatory world.--<b><i>Times Literary Supplement</b></i> on <i>Questions in the Vestibule</i> <p/>Hadas is one of the most accomplished <i>belle-lettrists</i>, author of twenty books of poetry, essays and translations. As a writer, she is disarmingly adept at moving between the personal--often using relationships and events from her own life as the subject matter or springboard into poems and essays, but her writing is also deeply shaped and informed by her classical background and fluency with narrative structure and by her formal dexterity.--<b><i>The Hudson Review</b></i> on <i>Questions in the Vestibule</i> <p/>[A] thoughtful and lucid tale of love, companionship, and heartbreaking illness.--<b>Lydia Davis</b> on <i>Strange Relation</i><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Rachel Hadas is a poet, essayist, and translator. She is the author of more than twenty books including <i>Poems for Camilla</i>, <i>Questions in the Vestibule</i>, and the memoir <i>Strange Relation</i>, and she is a frequent reviewer and columnist for the <i>Times Literary Supplement</i>. Hadas is Board of Governors Professor of English at Rutgers University-Newark. She lives in New York City.

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