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Micrographia
 
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Micrographia [Paperback]

Emily Wilson (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 15, 2009
Eight years after her revelatory first book, Emily Wilson deepens her focus and extends her vision in new poems of striking intelligence and originality. Venturing into landscapes both interior and exterior,Micrographiaexplores what Wilson calls “the complex rigged wildness” of geographical, emotional, and verbal states, a territory located “somewhere in that / enjambment within / a cave within the brain.” Following in the tradition of such poets as Dickinson, Bishop, and Ammons, Wilson's work regards the mind as “enmeshed” with the natural world, always “at the hinge of going over.” Her way of speaking is as precisely calibrated and as restless as her way of seeing, and the terrain ofMicrographiarises from a rich and unpredictable encounter with poetic language and form. At the same time, the voice of these poems is never less than urgent, “coming clear by the foment / moving through it.” 

Wilson's eye travels the troubled boundaries between visible and invisible worlds, ranging from coastal Nova Scotia to the Andean highlands to Brooklyn's industrial Gowanus Canal to the poet's own backyard. Steeped in tradition but spoken in tones that are utterly distinctive, these intricate poems enter into the microscopic, micrographic spaces between words and things, between thinking and being.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Borrowing her title and her eye for minutiae from Robert Hooke's popular 1665 scientific study of the natural world through a microscope, Emily Wilson argues, in these taut lyrics, that 350 years later we are still often mystified by the natural world. Favoring long, blocky stanzas that are dense with assonance and consonance, Wilson proves that language, like Hooke's lens, unravels the ordinary, revealing a raw garden where there are back-tracking collages/ of brambles and a bridge where [r]amparts ruck over the underside slips. As in her remarkable debut, The Keep (2001), in this second book, Wilson evokes landscapes that are dense and lush and legible, composed of beautiful forestations of made language. She also eschews the narrowness of the personal pronoun I to privilege instead an unbound lyric eye: So the eye has no end/ going on outside its compulsion. Her poems emerge as structures of a delicate and determined vision that sees the things that were forms/ unparceling themselves from their forms. This encounter, both lavish and intense, means that each poem is a [w]ild sweet locus for the world to be seen anew. (Mar.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author

Emily Wilson is the author ofThe Keep(Iowa, 2001). She holds degrees from Harvard and the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop, and is the recipient of a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. She lives in Brooklyn.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 62 pages
  • Publisher: University Of Iowa Press; 1 edition (March 15, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1587298015
  • ISBN-13: 978-1587298011
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 5.4 x 0.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #367,549 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4.0 out of 5 stars Another great one Emily!, July 14, 2010
By 
happy life (palo alto, ca United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Micrographia (Paperback)
Don't forget to read the author's other book...The Keep. It's a great one as well. She seems like someone who would appreciate a handmade mahogany jewelry box...with an inlay that may be a little crooked!
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4.0 out of 5 stars Not quite enough of a wonderful thing., January 15, 2010
This review is from: Micrographia (Paperback)
Emily Wilson, Micrographia (University of Iowa Press, 2009)

In 1665, Robert Hooke published Micrographia, or, Some Physical Descriptions of Minute Bodes Made by Magnifying Glasses, with Observations and Inquiries Thereupon. It was a revolutionary scientific text, one of the very first to describe the microscopic world. (Completely unrelated, it was also the first publication of the Royal Society, who have for centuries been Britain's premier publishers of scientific literature.) Emily Wilson didn't take up the science in her book Micrographia, but she obviously likes the idea of looking at things very closely. Each of the short poems in this sort volume hones in on something, examines it as closely as possible:

"it has not yet occurred upon the limb it has not determined to be spurlike
it is not yet done it lingers in the pattern of its advancement

are you long of this world I
am delivered into casting my bit among us

are you a being of more than one measure
ruffed so none can hold"
("Coal Age")

As well, Wilson has also internalized the patterns of microscopic life, using repetition in language the way organisms build with clusters of similar cells, and to much the same purpose. Emily Wilson's poetry is an organic thing, and a fine one. Paradoxically, my one problem with the collection is that I wanted more of it, though I know that such would probably destroy the balance. *** ½
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