Newspaperman and poet Tucker has a gift for celebrating the humble bliss of stillness and quiet without intimations of spiritual cachet or self-importance. Instead, he expresses a low-key joy in peacefulness, the act of lingering, and the pleasure of not doing. He writes subtly rebellious poems about days on which nothing obvious happens, the revelations of laziness, and the overlooked and poignant beauty of dust motes in a sunbeam, crows wheeling, and an apple as it falls drunkenly from the tree. Tucker portrays with affection local loafers and bench sitters, and remembers the amplitude and strictures of a Tennessee past. Deceptive in their sturdy plainness, these brick-and-mortar poems are inlaid with patterns as elegant as the swoop of swallows, and images as startling and right as a cat's bowl of milk shimmering as its "moon god." Chosen by Philip Levine as the winner of the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference Bakeless Prize, Tucker's collection, like a whispered confidence, draws the reader near, and tenderly rewards close attention.
Donna SeamanCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
"A fine and gentle invocation of humanity against too much urgency....Wonderful work!" --Tom Ashbrook, National Public Radio
"Here is cleverness and delight in language that do what only the best poems do." --Mark Bowden, journalist & author of Black Hawk Down
"[Tucker] keeps his eye focused, with tempered joy and genuine happiness, on how work also enlarges life....Terrific." --Andrew Hudgins