From Library Journal
Bierds's fifth collection (following The Ghost Trio, LJ 9/1/94) will take your breath away. Using interrelated poems to examine the image through various 19th-century technologies developed to capture it, Bierds astonishes with her abilities to build a sustained work of pathos and beauty. first She first presents Matthew Brady's photography through the voice of his assistant's cousin, who relives tragic family events by examining six family portraits taken by Brady. The central image of greenhouse glass?it seems that discarded glass negatives were used as greenhouse windows?is introduced here and recurs throughout, as in the brilliant image that concludes a poem spoken by the aged Dorothy Wordsworth: she recollects a hawk that crashed through several walls of greenhouse glass and "lay in a bloodshawl/ of ruby flowers, while the petals of glass/ on the brick-work floor repeated its image./ Again and again and again./ As all we have passed through sustains us." These difficult poems will reward the patient reader with clarity and beauty. A winner.?Ellen Kaufman, Dewey Ballantine Law Lib., New York
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
After-image
Altamira: What She Remembered
Balance: L.j.m. Daguerre
The Breaking-aways
Burning The Fields
Depth Of Field
The Diagnostic Silhouettes Of John Lavater: 1795
Edison: 1910
The Fan
From The Studio Of Etienne De Silhouette: 1760
The Geographer
Lawrence And Edison In New Jersey: 1923
Muybridge
Safe
Shawl: Dorothy Wordsworth At Eighty
The Sitters: 1. 1843
The Sitters: 2. July 17, 1861
The Sitters: 3. July 20, 1861
The Sitters: 4. 1896
Six In All: Five
Six In All: Four
Six In All: One
Six In All: Preface
Six In All: Six
Six In All: Three
Six In All: Two
The Suicide Of Clover Adams: 1885
The Three Trees
Van Leeuwenhoek: 1675
Vespertilio
The Weathervanes
Yellow Vision
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Table of Poems from Poem Finder®