In George B. Moore's third collection of poems the writer expresses how headhunting is a metaphor for the search for human essence. If modern talismans are less gruesome they nonetheless represent the same thing.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Consuming Poetry,
This review is from: Headhunting: Poems (Hardcover)
Within George Moore's book named Headhunting, one might glean totemic priceless artifacts of obsidian and jade fashioned from words, unearthed and collected from ancient multicultural detritus, and polished into phrases, and sharpened into clauses into poetry. Poems with such titles as Trilobite, Tzompantli, and Track, are to be savored and digested by the mind, as they slowly seep into our consciousness and become part of our existence.
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