Review
Although Eve may be seen as a symbol of the demonization of women, she shares many characteristics with the ancient mother-goddesses worldwide from whom her story derives. Like her predecessors, Eve brought both death and life to humanity. In some Judeo-Christian legends, she also persuaded God to allow humans to be resurrected. Annie Finch's poetry reveals an original and unforgettable poetic voice, one with a musical and passionate elegance. The different genres in Eve include a lyric sequence on ancient goddesses, a literary parody, a protest poem, and an original myth. When mother Eve took the first apple down/from the tree that grew where nature's heart had been/and came tumbling, circling, rosy, into sin/which goddesses were lost, and which were found?/What spirals moved in pity and unwound/across our mother's body with the spin/of planets lost for us and all her kin?/What serpents curved their mouths into a frown,/but left their bodies twined in us like threads/that lead us back to her? Her presence warms,/and if I follow closely through the maze,/it is to where her remembered reaching spreads/in branching gifts, it is to her reaching arms/that I look, as if for something near to praise. --
Midwest Book ReviewAncestor
Another Reluctance
Aphrodite
Being A Constellation
Brigid
Changng Woman
The Circled Sand
Coatlique
Courtship
Coy Mistress
Daughter
The Door
Driving Past Violets
Encounter
Eve
Frozen In
The Garden
Great Reading Room Murals
Gulf War And Child: A Curse
In Cities, Be Alert
Inanna
Insect
Inside The Violet
The Last Mermother
Lucid Waking
My Raptor
No Snake
Nut
Pearl
The Pitcher
Rain Birth
Rhiannon
Running In Church
Samhain
Sapphics For Patience
Spider Woman
Strangers
Thanksgiving
Three Generations Of Secrets
Tribute
Walk With Me
Westminster
The Wish For Eyes
Zaraf's Star
--
Table of Poems from Poem Finder®Annie Finch's brilliance as a young poet lies in her view of the world as complex: her passionate examinations of family relationships, of family history, of the search to understand one's place in the world are underpinned by a syntax and a poetic design equally passionate and complex. This is a formidable first volume of poetry --
Molly PeacockFinch's poems are wild. Her formal structures and vocabulary tie down an explosive vision of feminine power, aligned with fertility and earthiness.... When Finch steps outside herself, she looks back at the female body, her vehicle of connection to the originals of things, to fertility, "root of the live earth, live through my body. Sinking body, walk in me now." She calls herself away from the pity that might be in this darkness, through claims to the legacy of feminine power --
Hungry Mind Review, Fall, 1997[Finch] provides us with a superb anthology of interesting and rewarding verse forms: sonnets, traditional and rebellious both; a villanelle; and several more arcane forms chosen for their appropriateness to the subject, such as the four-stress lines of Inanna, a Sumerian form for a Sumerian goddess.... [she] is often associated with the poets known as the new formalists, but she cheerfully and with great competence ignores several of their stated principles, such as avoidance of European cultural totems or adherence to a self-consciously American idiom --
The Washington Times, July 6, 1997
Product Description
Though Eve may be seen as a symbol of the demonization of women, she shares many characteristics with the ancient mother-goddesses worldwide from whom her story derives. Like her predecessors, Eve brought both death and life to humanity. In some Judeo-Christian legends, she also persuaded God to allow humans to be resurrected.
Annie Finch's book of poems reveals an original and unforgettable poetic voice. Finch's poems have a mysterious, musical, and passionate elegance, the work of a highly skilled and innovative poet. The different genres in Eve include a lyric sequence on ancient goddesses, a literary parody, a protest poem, and an original myth.
Finch, whose work as a critic and anthologist is expanding the boundaries of new formalist poetry, presents a wide diversity of poems in this impressively crafted book. Her virtuosity encompasses traditional European and classical forms as well as accentual chant form and haunting falling rhythms. This collection heralds Annie Finch as a poet of grace as well as style, verve as well as form.
See all Editorial Reviews