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Trapeze: Poems
 
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Trapeze: Poems [Hardcover]

Deborah Digges (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

March 16, 2004
These lush, rewarding reflections on a woman’s passage into midlife are grounded in our intimacy with nature and mortality. Deborah Digges, now in her fifties, looks back in such poems as “Boat” to see younger mothers and their children, and ponders her own “brilliant, trivial unmooring.” As she wanders from the garden to the barn and into the woods, she finds her moods mirrored in the calendar of the seasons, making lush music of the materials at hand and accepting the seismic changes in her life with an appreciation for the incidental scraps of beauty she chances upon.

Throughout these luminous poems–which touch movingly on the illness and loss of her husband–Digges marvels at the brio with which we fling ourselves daringly into the night:

See how the first dark takes the city in its arms
and carries it into what yesterday we called the future.

O, the dying are such acrobats.
Here you must take a boat from one day to the next,

or clutch the girders of the bridge, hand over hand.
But they are sailing like a pendulum between eternity and evening,

diving, recovering, balancing the air.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Digges's return to poetry after two successful memoirs showcases familiar strengths: supple, sometimes lengthy free verse lines whose fluent and heightened language bolsters familial and elegiac concerns. Much of the volume, indeed, concentrates on elegy: Digges casts herself as inheritor, beekeeper, even a mythological "Greeter of Souls": "Souls who have passed here, tired, brightening.... On which side of the river should I wait?" Digges teaches at Tufts University, outside Boston; though many poems traverse New England landscapes, some stray as far afield as the Arctic Circle or ancient China. Digges keeps one eye out, always, for symbols of loss, considering "the most mortal of all circles,/ mother to child and child to father"; some poems focus on deaths within her family, though others invoke more generally "the aftermath of youth,/ its strange enduring dust," alert to the omnipresent "ghost of what-had-been." Readers of Digges's earlier volumes (especially 1989's Late in the Millennium) may find this fourth volume surprising in its tight focus on the personal, more like Louise Glück or Mary Oliver than like Marianne Moore or Amy Clampitt. This scaling back seems a conscious choice, and not a wrong one: those who have come to know Digges through her memoirs, Fugitive Spring (which considered her baby-boomer coming of age) and The Stardust Lounge (about her troubled son) will appreciate the strong emotions her articulate lyric uncovers to reveal.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

A poet and memoirist, most recently in The Stardust Lounge (2001), Digges now takes stock in her newest poetry collection of where capricious life has landed her in "the aftermath of youth." Not that she writes overtly of aging, stasis, or stoicism. No, these are vital, strongly rendered, and deeply female lyrics rocked by wind, drenched by rain, and tugged by the tides of the heart. Digges' imagery is gloriously sensuous, her feelings exquisitely articulated and choreographed. Her contemplations of time, the soul, love, birth, and death are philosophical without turning abstract because Digges revels in the shimmering lexicon of light, scent, sound, taste, and texture. Classical allusions anchor her agile descriptions of a garden's vibrancy, the redolent emptiness of a winter barn, dusk, lilacs, the clothes of a dead man, and the spectacle she and her wet dogs unintentionally provide for a captive audience of toddlers and young mothers on the shore of a small pond. Digges works like an acrobat without a net, and readers will not be able to take their eyes off of her. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 72 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; First Edition edition (March 16, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400040825
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400040827
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 6.1 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,157,199 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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10 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful poems!, May 29, 2004
By 
Anita Brenner "anita_b" (La Canada Flintridge, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Trapeze: Poems (Hardcover)
The subject of these poems is the death of Digges' husband, from cancer.

The poems are lyrical and honest.

The title poem, is stunning --- "Trapeze" (..."O, the dying are such acrobats. Here you must take a boat from one day to the next, or clutch the girders of the bridge, hand over hand. But they are sailing like a pendulum between eternity and evening...").

Also, "Greeter of Souls" ("...Can I not be a greeter of souls...on which side of the river should I wait?")

Digges asks all the questions that the bereaved will ask. These are lovely poems.

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