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The Radiant
 
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The Radiant [Paperback]

Cynthia Huntington (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 1, 2003
In Cynthia Huntington's The Radiant, what is most tragic can, and often does, become beautiful. "What/ is memory? Who stays to mourn?/ It seems we feel so much/ and then we die. The marsh hawk/ veers over the grass, listening."

Poems about Multiple Sclerosis and domestic turmoil are never drowned in the rhetoric of complaint, but seized by language that is intense yet seeks the equilibrium of its own level: "His loneliness is cold water. that makes rocks shine. Great stillness/ where he is. Then, slowly, birds."

The poems in The Radiant flow brutally from a scarred heart, from "what grows hard, and cannot be repaired." But in the end these are prayers of thankfulness, prayers that transcend desire: ". . . we belong here, where no one is refused,/ in the room we come to at last--immortal,/ irreparable, beyond hope."

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"This is a remarkable book that will reward repeated readings. It is also a book of awful things-sickness and suffering and betrayal" (Susan Mitchell, judge of the Levis Poetry Prize )

From the Publisher

6 x 9 1/4" trim.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 92 pages
  • Publisher: Four Way; 1st edition (April 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1884800491
  • ISBN-13: 978-1884800498
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6 x 0.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.9 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #246,694 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Radiant, July 4, 2003
By 
This review is from: The Radiant (Paperback)
I read poems to get a buzz--a surge, a belly-shudder. Mostly I'm disappointed, but I'll read a thousand ok poems to get to One that Works. The Radiant is full of buzz-poems. Huntington's voice is as pure as Mary Oliver's, and urgent, also, like James Wright's. But more importantly, the poems in The Radiant entertain: they are pleasurable--they zing.

In The Radiant, Huntington writes about her battles with Multiple Sclerosis, her broken marriage, and sea-swirled Provincetown. In her poem, "The Rapture," she writes about the moment she was first seized by MS: "I remember standing in the kitchen, stirring bones for soup, / and in that moment, I became another person." There--that is her voice throughout The Radiant: pure, intimate, compelling: she begins with the every-day and ends with the extraordinary. Later, in the same poem, she writes about her first MS attack, describing it as "a bolt driven down my skull into my spine." Such unflinching honesty characterizes all the poems in The Radiant.

Huntington's four Curse poems will be the most talked about poems in the book. Two of the curses are directed toward her friend (now her ex-friend) who slept with her husband; two are directed toward her adulterous husband (now her ex-husband). In "Curse One: The Wraith," Huntington calls her former friend "a small shape of death crouched among leaves." In "Curse Two: The Naming," Huntington curses this woman again, savagely, but also with some (dark) humor:

I want to throw stones at her mother's corpse,
send her children to name-change foster homes.
May the coat she is wearing burst into flames
and boil the flesh blistering off her bones.
May she be refused in both heaven and hell
and wander the earth forever without rest--
a hungry ghost clinging to the rocks and trees.

The curses transform a contemporary human affairs into a Biblical, even mythological, event. But forget all that: read the excerpt outloud--feel the energy, the surge! You'll not find such words in the Hallmark aisles or on your Grandmother's fridge. The Curse poems are wickedly delightful poems. They are brutal. They are masterful. They will endure.

The Curse poems are the Big Hits of The Radiant, and the poems about MS are compelling, also, but the poems about Other Topics--nature, history and mythology--are no less skillful and imaginative. Consider the beginning to "Hades":

God made the dog
perpetually hungry,
yearning after a handout,
a dug up bone, a taste
of meat or bread,
but without sense
to ever stop eating. . . .

This is clear-eyed poetry--straight-forward and wise. In "The Strange Insect," Huntington focuses her gaze on just what the title suggests--an odd, unidentified bug. She calls it "the wickedest jeweled queen" and describes it "drumming small / horny feet in a cadence, beginning to speak. . . ." She takes a Little Thing, and by examining it in the light of her imagination, discovers its mystery, its Vastness.

Eventually, however, it's the voice of the poet which makes her poems compelling or forgettable, and Huntington's voice is pure and passionate; it is her voice which makes The Radiant so good. Here is an excerpt from "Vale," one of the poems in her "On the Atlantic" series:

The world is where we die.
Let's climb the mountain
and make a fire there
out of wood that grows
with its roots in the black cold water.
Let's climb the rocks,
go up alone. In the valley they sleep
with their heads on stones. Mice
gnaw the fisherman's nets for salt
and the fish swim through.

The people sleep
with their heads on stones,
and angels come down on ladders,
bearing messages. They carry
the page help open to our names:
let's not be there when they come.

Huntington doesn't have to resort to fancy tricks or literary allusion or political commentary to make her poems work; her voice is enough. These are simple words: "fire," "roots,"
"mice," "salt," "ladders"--these are things of this world made radiant.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Courageous, heart-breaking, and beautiful., June 11, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: The Radiant (Paperback)
As Bruce Weigl says in "The Impossible": "Say it clearly and you make it beautiful, no matter what." That's what this collection does, transforming painful experience into art, into truly necessary beauty. If you've ever been betrayed--by a loved one, by your body, your dreams, or anything else, you'll find solace in the achievements of this book.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Radiant, December 21, 2009
By 
Anna Benda (Kirkland, WA USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Radiant (Paperback)
Now that I've run into Cynthia Huntington's poetry after so many years of trying to rebuild my own shattered life, I recognize a sister. Huntington's bravely personal poetry brings me as close as probably possible to identifying with another person. Huntington's poetry is honest, beautiful, and intimately scary.
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