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Psalm synopsis | selected poems | reviews |
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$100.00 signed, numbered, limited edition hardcover Order Now! $16.95 pb Order Now! Go to Checkout |
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All proceeds from the sale of the hardcover edition will go to support the Tupelo Press National Poetry in the Schools Program. Psalm affirms what’s most essential to ordinary life and to artistic expression: the fact that one is permitted to walk the earth and partake of its wonders. Psalm searches for ways of verifying the world through art and experience. In a narrative arc, Psalm takes the poet from her father’s death to her son’s birth. In between are all the elements of the imagination: faith, art, music, culture. This world expands to include Vermeer’s nuns, Cornell on a bike ride on the Brooklyn promenade and the sound of Django Reinhardt all simultaneous to her son’s cries, his presence. The poet moves forward inside and then away from grief. Her lyric poems begin to furnish the afterlife, even as they do the time before birth. “There is a particular quality of quietude and stillness that suffuses these painterly poems of Carol Ann Davis, so involved with loss, motherhood and the shifting tonalities of light that transform the domestic and ordinary into the strange and extraordinary that, combined with tenderness of address, approach the worshipful and make a number of
these poems so moving and distinctive.” “Carol Ann Davis's poems are so precise they are almost hallucinatory. And in some poems she sets hallucination free. The precision is true, creating a marvelously jarring effect. She is always studying reality, with a microscope that creates sure distortions. There is a sad pageant going on in these poems, one that breaks your heart. And then gives you your life back all over again.” |
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| Selected Poems | ||
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Plainsong And the dogs will have their routes, will hold their fancy books of orders. Coming in low fly their rotations, the ocean grown senile, —Love’s Car Service
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| Reviews | ||
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The journal Image has published a perceptive review of Carol Ann Davis's beautiful Psalm. It concludes: The Spring, 2008 issue of The Southern Review contains an eloquent review of Carol Ann Davis's Psalm. Alison Pelegrin writes: “The finest poems in Psalm dwell on small things, itself a reminder that under the watch of the right eyes, everything can be sacred. In “Grief Daybook III,” Davis quotes some liner notes from a Coltrane record, which read, “it all has to do with it,” and she certainly adheres to that premise in her collection, with a song of praise for everything from grief and death, the sound of a child squealing, to stave church paintings.” You can read the rest of this perceptive review on the Tupelo Press website. "Grief Daybook II" from Carol Ann Davis's Psalm was Poetry Daily's poem of the day for December 1, 2007. |
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Last modified July 16, 2008 Copyright © Tupelo Press 2007