<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>In <strong><em>Stronger Than the Current</em></strong>, Mark Thalman describes the dangerous work of logging in the early 1900's, and the hardships these Oregonians faced. Thalman then continues the historic journey with poems depicting important historical events: the drowning of Celilo Falls, the hurricane known as the Columbus Day Storm, and the Tillamook Forest Fire-powerful as a hydrogen bomb. Many of the poems reveal how residents are resilient to the weather. Helen McCready keeps a rowboat tied to her front porch because of winter floods. Another person watches goats and uses them as a barometer to predict the daily forecast. The Tillamook feast in their lodges while telling stories of the widow who cannot stop crying. These lyrical poems paint memorable landscapes, <em>Sage grows low so wind can go where it wants-whistling through wire fences</em>.</p><p><br></p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>Mark Thalman sets us working in the wet woods of Oregon. We feel the bark, smell the smoke, hear the saws, and watch as <em>rain glistens like salmon scales/ on the tip of an eagle's beak.</em> These vignettes of the 1920s through 60s relive the beauty and passing of a wilder heritage. I was moved and haunted by "Arlington, Oregon, 1956," where a boy imagines the Columbia rising behind John Day Dam, his mother telling him, <em>everything will be under water/ like the castle in your fishbowl</em>. And I worried, smiled and cheered for Helen McCready of "Mapleton." Though she loses her prize tulips to the surging Siuslaw, she ties a rowboat to the porch, remains <em>stronger than the current</em> and casts for salmon. These well-crafted poems embody the simple, indestructible beauty of Oregon and its people. </p>-<strong>Henry Hughes, Oregon Book Award Winner</strong></p><p><br></p><p><br></p>These sturdy, brief, plainspoken poems have a distinctive Made-in-Oregon stamp to them. There are logging poems and landscape poems-weather and landscape figure prominently in them-and poems of Oregon history. The "Tillamook Burn" and "Celilo Falls" . . . and "Finley's Pasture" where <em>Four Belgians, ebony titans, long retired, / graze the green pasture.</em> Modest, quiet poems, unassuming, but rich in substance and detail, like a good meal they stick with you. </p>-<strong>Clemens Starck, Oregon Book Award Winner and author of <em>Cathedrals & Parking Lots</em></strong></p><p><br></p><br>
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