<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>A selection from twenty years of poetry from one of the key avant-garde women poets of the post-Language generation.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>Inspired by the Beats, Black Mountain, and the New York School, Lisa Jarnot emerged in the 1990s as one of the foremost poets of the post-Language avant-garde. Joie de Vivre draws on twenty years of work, from the bold fragmentation of her mixed media debut, Some Other Kind of Mission, to the experimental lyricism of her recent Night Scenes. Following the poet's evolution through her engagements with form and music, Joie de Vivre showcases Jarnot's restless virtuosity and relentless curiosity. The archaic, the surreal, the pastoral, the political--no register of language proves too recalcitrant for her expansive sense of song.</p><p><strong>About the Author: </strong></p><p>Born in Buffalo, New York, in 1967, Lisa Jarnot studied with Robert Creeley at SUNY Buffalo and later earned an MFA at Brown University. The author of four full-length poetry collections and the former editor of the <em>Poetry Project Newsletter</em>, she has also just published <em>Robert Duncan: The Ambassador From Venus</em> (University of California Press, 2012), the definitive biography of the San Francisco poet. Since the mid-1990s, she has lived in New York City.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>Riveting . . . Reading this work is truly a joy.--<em>Publishers Weekly</em></p><p>This compilation includes the best of Jarnot's Whitmanesque reflections and Ginsbergian outcries, speech acts that list always toward an avant-garde.--<em>Booklist</em></p><p>Her ideas meddle in the traditions of form, medium, sound, and arrangement to recall the modernism of Joyce and Stein . . . This selection highlights her inventiveness.--<em>Library Journal</em></p><p>Lisa Jarnot's book of joy raises joy in return. It is a poetry of lyric finesse and emotional daring, a rollicking vision of violet skies and walk-along streets, with the walker shamelessly in wonder but--yo!--cagily of the streets.--Aaron Shurin</p><p>Joie de Vivre rings out with troubled beauty, ancient lastingness, and a wild lyricism that shares as much with Johnny Cash as with Gertrude Stein and loves Homer even when it thinks like Abbie Hoffman. This work sets the house of American poetry on fire.--Elizabeth Willis</p><p>These always strongly oral poems that cry out from the page in sequences that veer between pure whimsy within a spoken word sensibility approach and often surpass art song territory. The crescendo resolution is felt in the extended 'Amedillin Cooperative Nosegay' where the expanse of her well-earned landscape becomes a realized space in proper necessity for the scope of her delightfully unpredictable poetic.--David Henderson</p><p>Jarnot's poetry continues to resonate because-after the experimentation and language play-her poems still burst both with feeling and beauty . . . Jarnot finds a way to capture a moment of emotional intensity with and in language, while simultaneously letting that moment retain the mystery and the wonder which it produces.--Joshua Ware, <em>Vouched Books</em></p><p>There's a pop-Romanticism, American to the core, behind the majority of Jarnot's most easily enjoyable verse . . . These poems orbit day to day reality on paths based off non sequiturs and randy loop de loops.--Patrick-James-Dunagan, <em> The Rumpus</em></p><p>Lisa Jarnot possesses both the raw lyrical pathos of Johnny Cash and the complex stylistics of Gertrude Stein . . . --Mike Sonksen, KCET</p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><p>Lisa Jarnot was born in Buffalo, New York in 1967. She attended the State University of New York at Buffalo during the late 1980s and Brown University from 1992-1994. Since the mid-1990s has been a resident of New York City.</p><p>She has edited two small magazines (<em>No Trees</em>, 1987-1990, and <em>Troubled Surfer</em>, 1991-1992) as well as <em>The Poetry Project Newsletter</em> and <em>An Anthology of New (American) Poetry</em> (Talisman House Publishers, 1997).</p><p>She is the author of four full-length collections of poetry: <em>Some Other Kind of Mission</em> (Burning Deck Press, 1996), <em>Ring of Fire</em> (Zoland Books, 2001 and Salt Publishers, 2003), <em>Black Dog Songs</em> (Flood Editions, 2003) and <em>Night Scenes</em> (Flood Editions, 2008). She is also the author of <em>Robert Duncan: The Ambassador From Venus</em> (University of California Press, 2012), a comprehensive biography of the San Francisco poet. Her work has appeared in numerous magazines and anthologies including <em>The Nation</em>, <em>The Brooklyn Rail</em>, <em>Jacket</em>, <em>Poetry 180: a turning back to poetry</em> and <em>Great American Prose Poems</em>.</p><p>She has been a visiting writer at The Poetry Project, Naropa University, the University of Colorado and Brooklyn College, and has given readings and lectures throughout the United States, England and France.<br /><br />She collaborated with New York filmmaker Jennifer Reeves on the 2004 film <em>The Time We Killed</em>, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival.</p><p>She currently lives in Sunnyside, New York where she lives with her husband and daughter and works as a freelance gardener.</p>
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