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Writing Naked - by Coleen Marks (Paperback)

Writing Naked - by  Coleen Marks (Paperback)
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Last Price: 13.99 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>Writing Naked illuminates a life like a series of lightning flashes, allowing us glimpses</p><p>ranging over seven decades and six generations, from "sepia-toned" great-grandmothers</p><p>to a vivid little grandson. The opening poem, "It's Time," with its "Hey, I'm only</p><p>seventy-five" and "I always do better with deadlines," sets the tone for a collection</p><p>always imbued with wit and joy, considering the sacred in the day-to-day, the humorous</p><p>in the tragic, the profound in simple clothing. This collection touches on personal</p><p>experiences with feisty kindness and startling drollery. Even the poems of bereavement</p><p>and loss are run through by a current of celebration and homage of the particular persons</p><p>and through them to life itself. Those dedicated to her father and to the husband who was</p><p>"the one" of her life are particularly strong and poignant. The title poem shows us the I</p><p>of this book, writing, sitting naked on a blanket, in full sunshine under a sky of Canaletto</p><p>blue, "hiding nothing," as the poems themselves seem to do. Writing Naked is Coleen</p><p>Marks' d�but collection and, yes, it's time.</p><p>Enriqueta Carrington, Translator of Treasury of Mexican Love Poems, </p><p>Quotations & Proverbs</p><p> </p><p>In Writing Naked, Coleen Marks gives us personal poems with a wider resonance: </p><p>childhood and coming of age in a large, working class Irish-American family, then an</p><p>adult life of love, work, relationships, and growing older in a long and close marriage.</p><p>She is an engaging story-teller--in fact the word "stories" crops up as a motif throughout</p><p>the book, as she observes "stories...on the see saw between too simple and too complex."</p><p>She writes about day jobs and earning a living (not often the subject of poetry), as well as</p><p>her developing feminist consciousness in a male-dominated social milieu. These firstperson</p><p>poems tell of loved ones and strangers, hardship and play, art and ardor, captured</p><p>with a down-to-earth thoughtfulness that evokes emotions from carefree ("A Room with a</p><p>View") to deeply touching ("Sgt. Gomez," "At Ninety-One"). Writing Naked conveys an</p><p>open-hearted yet clear-eyed optimism, and an ethical commitment to taking one's place in</p><p>the world.</p><p>Maxine Susman Author of Gogama and Provincelands</p>

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