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46 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Heaven in a wildflower., December 5, 2000
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Mary Oliver is one of my favorite poets. (I recommend her NEW AND SELECTED POEMS (1993).) Although I could easily praise this new book of poems all day, I will keep my comments short. Oliver has taken the title of this book from John Ruskin, who wrote: "Between the earth and man arose the leaf. Between the heaven and man came the cloud. His life being partly as the falling leaf, and partly as the flying vapour." This reference is helpful, I think, in showing that Oliver's seven-poem progression is as much a meditation on the wonders of the natural world ("Everyday--I stare at the world; I push the grass aside/ and stare at the world," p. 9), as it is a profound prayer ("I look up/ into the faces of the stars,/ into their deep silence" p. 44).

Oliver is not the first poet to observe "heaven in a wildflower," but she has the unique ability to find poetry in nature. "What secrets fly out of the earth/ when I push the shovel-edge/ when I heave the dirt open?" (p. 21). She also writes, "It may be the rock in the field is also a song" (p. 14), and "maybe the world, without us,/ is the real poem" (p. 17). The poetry Oliver witnesses in the natural world is synonymous with God's presence. Through nature's beauty and mystery, Oliver discovers "If God exists he isn't just butter and good luck--/ he isn't just the summer day the red rose/ he's the snake he's the mouse,/ he's the hole in the ground" (p. 50).

The poetry here is earthy yet spiritual, simple yet profound. "Words are thunders of the mind" (p. 12). In addition to Ruskin and Blake, there are echoes of Whitman, Emerson, and Plato in these poems. This may be the best book of new poems I've read this year. It is also a good starting point for anyone who has never experienced the pleasures of poetry before.

G. Merritt

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Shaking Free", November 1, 2000
Mary Oliver's poetry takes away the breath and gives back breath; quickens the pulse and slows it; prays beside the need of the reader; opens most everything. This work, in particular, epic; enduring.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Breathtaking, March 1, 2003
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This review is from: The Leaf And The Cloud: A Poem (Paperback)
As always, Mary Oliver's poetry simply takes my breath away. It is at the same time bound to earth and ethereal. She seems to be contemplating mortality, as well as the wonder of life as we live. Although one long poem, each stanza is a poem unto itself, each word a butterfly in your window.
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11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Profoundly Moving, July 14, 2001
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M. Tierra "MT" (Santa Cruz, California USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I have to admit that I am in love with Mary Oliver's poetry. She is not only a master writer but seeing the world through her eyes is like looking through a prism of nature only to discover how the various parts of our humanity are reflected outside of ourselves. Be patient, a poem is short but not something to be read in haste. Any good poem like this one requires at least two readings to allow the metaphors and images to seep into the depths of our being. Further, some good poetry is only clever while great poetry such as this miniature epic, is for the heart, working its magic by slowly catching us unaware as it lifts us up -- like a leaf or a cloud, or both together --- and in the end gently leaving us off somewhere refreshingly new, a place where we are offhandedly aware of having experienced the breadth and nobility of our inner self. (Isn't that the highest calling of all great art?). It is Mary Oliver's only epic work where somehow all the poems relate to each other but not as a plot or continuous story, but more like all the elements in a wild mountain meadow or a forested glen are perceived as relating to each other. Once beginning to read it from the first page, you will soon find yourself hypnotically drawn to its completion about 30 or 45 minutes later. If you are a Mary Oliver fan, don't look for individual poetic gems such as White Cloud or Wild Geese (they are there but less obvious to allow the whole to emerge. After writing this review on a slightly overcast summer saturday morning, I feel the gentle urge to return to the coziness of my bed and read it over again.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sheer Joy, May 11, 2008
This review is from: The Leaf And The Cloud: A Poem (Paperback)
To read Mary Oliver's The Leaf and the Cloud is to be swept up in a journey that is both intimate and universal at the same time. At once describing, with breathtaking lucidity, the epic beauty and staggering complexity of nature, then suddenly referring to her own humanity with poignant inquisitions, Oliver traverses internal and external environments in an elegant interplay that is, quite simply, addictive.
Not just a "Nature Poet" or "Neo-Romantic", Oliver moves beyond poetry that merely observes nature or draws quaint metaphors from its form, to a new level that celebrates humanity and nature as two parts of an indefinable, mysterious and ultimately beautiful whole.
Their is so much joy in the way in which Oliver describes the world that it is contagious, and you will forever view your surroundings differently as a result of reading this book. It isn't just her exquisite grasp of nature that makes this book so pleasurable, however, it is also the way in which she unravels her own character and story within the natural environment that makes you keep turning the pages.
This was my first encounter with Oliver's work, but certainly not the last. Highly recommended.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mary Oliver: Living American Legend, January 7, 2006
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This review is from: The Leaf And The Cloud: A Poem (Paperback)
Few works stand across generations lighting the best American writers. Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass, and Mary Oliver's The Leaf and The Cloud, are two. The difference is that Oliver is alive and working today. I rejoice in her bravery to write the real work, that because it is real, lush, sensual, and drives deep into an open reader's soul like the tendrils of exuberant vines, will likely endure for future generations as long as humans do. Remember that Whitman wasn't completely embraced in his era either, and many opinion makers expecting whatever they were expecting, turned on him as did James Harlan, Secretary of the Interior, after the Civil War.

The best advice is to form your own opinion. Borrow a copy of Mary Oliver's The Leaf and The Cloud, read it. If you respond to it as I have, you will be buying your own copy of a living American legend.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A bittersweet taste of life, January 21, 2005
This review is from: The Leaf And The Cloud: A Poem (Paperback)


I received this small, but powerful book of poetry as a gift from a lifelong friend after the death of my mother. My friend wanted to express more than she found in a sympathy card and felt that this poet could bring me comfort, would speak to my soul. I have only now been able to read it.

In "Flare" I read:
"May they sleep well. May they soften." I can allow my mother to leave without rage. Later, I can release her from worldly obligations:
"But I will not give them the kiss of complicity.
I will not give them responsibility for my life."

In words as soft as rose petals or the touch of a baby's cheek, Oliver invokes images that lighten the burdens of life, but tempered with reality, as quietly powerful as a balled fist. Oliver views everything around her from inside nature's world, where the dictates are profoundly simple, where lessons abound for the observant. As a guide, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author is sensitive to the reality of nature's cycles, the interconnectedness of all that surrounds us.

In "Gravel", I found my own thought spoken:
"This is the poem of goodbye.
And this is the poem of I don't know."

Filled with beginnings and endings, I found myself thinking about the world more thoughtfully, grateful for its idiosyncratic beauty and finely wrought perfection, for its ability to guide birth, death and rebirth, a continuum of all life. "Maybe the real world, without us,/ is the real poem."(From the Book of Time) Luan Gaines/2005.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Kiss of Complicity, October 4, 2006
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This review is from: The Leaf And The Cloud: A Poem (Paperback)
In this poem, Mary Oliver walks us through the journey of life and calls
on us to pay attention and see, smell and hear. She asks death to "unstring
my bones,let me be not one thing but all things..."

In these days of violence and blaming of actions on past grievances, Oliver
says of her dead parents,
"I give them-one, two, three, four- the kiss of courtesy
of sweet thanks,
of anger, of good luck in the deep earth.
May they sleep well. May they soften.

But I will not give them the kiss of complicity.
I will not give them the responsibility for my life."

Powerful, strong words.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sublime Poet, February 23, 2006
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This review is from: The Leaf And The Cloud: A Poem (Paperback)
Mary Oliver is a magnificent, aware voice, speaking in a deep, almost spiritual way. She transforms daily life, a drive, a walk, a look across the fields, into magical, sensitive,moments of awe.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars High quality poetry, June 5, 2005
This review is from: The Leaf And The Cloud: A Poem (Paperback)
Mary Oliver is amazing. I read this book because it was recommended by my English Lit. prof., and then I loved it and had to go out and buy it. Mary Oliver literally wrote the book on free verse poetry (see, "The Poetry Handbook" by the same author). The way the words flow is beautiful. Even if you don't really like modern poetry, I think you'll fall in love with this long poem.
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The Leaf And The Cloud: A Poem
The Leaf And The Cloud: A Poem by Mary Oliver (Paperback - Oct. 2001)
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