<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>"Continuing the saga initiated with her prior collection Life After Death, Jane Rohrer offers poetry recording her journey from a cloistered upbringing among conservative Mennonites and Church of the Brethren adherents to going "on the road, collecting places," as her title poem "Acquiring Land" describes it"--<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>DreamSeeker Poetry Series editor Jeff Gundy says in relation to <em>Acquiring Land</em> that "Jane Rohrer came late to poetry, but there is nothing belated about her marvelous new collection. These alert, inventive, expansive poems travel widely--into her memory and family history, and around the world--constantly offering up bold, moving insights and turns of phrase."</p><p>As her life expanded from Mennonite and Church of the Brethren roots in Broadway, Virginia, through marrying painter Warren Rohrer and raising sons in suburban Philadelphia to launching a late but flourishing writing career in the 1970s, Jane Rohrer became an accomplished poet.</p><p>Rohrer's publications works include a prior poetry volume, <em>Life After Death</em> (Sheep Meadow Press, 2002), about which Stephen Berg said, "Her idiom is so original, so plain, so authentic, it easily might be missed in the current noisy welter of media hype and inflated poetry. It's skill is absolute honesty, line after line set down because it must be."</p><p>Overviewing the current collection, its editor Julia Kasdorf Spicher reports that "The clarity of statement in the poems collected here is hard won and contains traces of the distance she's come and all she's brought with her to arrive at this brave voice." <em>--From the Introduction</em></p><p>As an excerpt from Rohrer's title poem puts it, <strong> "</strong>Sixty years ago, my fiancé's parents / Were relieved he would marry a girl / Whose father owned a thousand acres. / They had their standards. / I see the Shenandoah now / Like a World War II movie, sepia toned, / And the river flows by the house someone owns. . . . / My mind is filled today / With a whiff of Lisbon in the rain."</p><p><em>Acquiring Land </em>is for anyone interested in poetry that, as Rohrer's poem "Story" describes it, invite us to "recognize ourselves / as we are, everywhere at once."</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>"Jane Rohrer came late to poetry, but there is nothing belated about <em>Acquiring Land</em>, her marvelous new collection. These alert, inventive, expansive poems travel widely--into her memory and family history, and around the world--constantly offering up bold, moving insights and turns of phrase.</p><p>"Few poets are ready to turn both acquisitive capitalism and generations of Mennonite hunger for farmland on their heads, but Rohrer does just that, in spare but visionary poems that call us to enter a world where we 'recognize ourselves / as we are, everywhere at once.' An intimate, candid conversation between Rohrer and her granddaughter further explores the idea that for the alert writer 'Everything Is a Studio.'"<em> --Jeff Gundy, </em><em> Author, </em>Abandoned Homeland<em> and </em>Somewhere Near Defiance; <em>Series Editor</em>, DreamSeeker Poetry Series<br /> </p><br>
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