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Without - by Meg Johnson (Paperback)

Without - by  Meg Johnson (Paperback)
Store: Target
Last Price: 12.99 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>In Meg Johnson's third full length collection, strange experiences become familiar and familiar experiences become strange, as a human body, a sense of self, and an entire nation all teeter toward the verge of destruction.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>In Meg Johnson's third full length collection, <em>Without: Body, Name, Country</em>, <strong>strange experiences become familiar and familiar experiences become strange, as a human body, a sense of self, and an entire nation all teeter toward the verge of destruction.</strong></p><p>In daring poems and intimate flash nonfiction pieces, Johnson portrays a world that is corrupt yet full of possibilities. Sometimes frightening, sometimes funny, one woman's struggles with health, identity, and politics reveal universal adversity, longing, and wildness.</p><p>Reading this book is to climb "a spiral staircase in a tower full of fun house mirrors." <em>Without: Body, Name, Country</em> is the book you didn't know you needed.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>"I've known Meg Johnson's work for a few years, but not until now did I realize she's been sitting on a rickety folding chair in a corner of my buzzy brain, transcribing the flukey rants and loopy ferocities that all of us--all of us--are feeling right now slash all the time. Pick up this book and eat it, I mean love it, I mean eat it." --Daniel Handler, bestselling author of <em>Why We Broke Up</em></p><p>"To enter Meg Johnson's poems in <em>Without: Body, Name, Countr</em>y is to enter a spiral staircase in a tower full of fun house mirrors: the language distorts the familiar into new but recognizable realities, sometimes wryly hilarious, sometimes hauntingly unsettling. The images in these poems will catch you like a trapeze artist, bending and contorting in wondrous ways. The poems explore the subject of girlhood: the speaker "is forever entering a room. Inhaling the cusp of capture." In prose poems and free verse, Johnson excavates the topography of the body, of illness and anxiety, of politics and patriarchy, lamenting, "I guess I was supposed to be flattered because people said I was pretty. But it felt like a liability to me." This liability of living in a body, gendered, fertilizes the landscape of all the imagery. Read this collection and marvel as different parts of you are "lighting up like a pin ball machine." Anne Champion</p><p>"Meg Johnson's third book of poems is a fierce, playful, unapologetic, and morally complex examination of life. The poems range from breezy to formally inventive, from serious-hilarious soliloquies about the vagaries of identity to psychologically insightful reports on the author's own harrowing journey through womanhood and through illness. <em>Without: Body, Name, Country</em> is a deeply personal, brazenly satirical, and subtly political call to awakening. Those who enjoy memoir and poetry will find both forms seamlessly and searingly interwoven here." Mark Leidner</p><p>"<em>Without: Body, Name, Country</em> is a blazing manifesta for our current world. Meg Johnson battles "the beast of chronic pain," and navigates her survival from a sometimes-fatal disease with a ferocity that has to be read to be believed. "Post images of empty landscapes as / if no one has survived," one poem demands of the reader. But these poems will survive, long after we are gone, and I, for one, feel lucky to have shared the earth with them." Shaindel Beers, author of <em>Secure Your Own Mask</em>, winner of the White Pine Press Poetry Prize, finalist for the Oregon Book Award in Poetry</p><br>

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