For Today

Poems

Carolyn Hembree author Ava Leavell Haymon editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Louisiana State University Press

Published:31st Jan '24

Should be back in stock very soon

For Today cover

A revelatory collection of poems set in the Gulf South, Carolyn Hembree's For Today chronicles the experience of a woman who becomes a mother shortly after her father's death and struggles to raise her child amid private and public turmoil. Written in closed and nonce forms that give way to the field composition of the maximalist title poem, the work explores grief, rage, and love in a community vulnerable to Anthropocene climate disasters. Through relationships with her daughter, neighbors, friends, ancestors, other poets (living and dead), and the earth, the speaker is freed to accept and celebrate her own perishability.

Carolyn Hembree's For Today is a wild ride of formal innovation, odes, and elegies. Any reader would be taken with the poet's modified sonnet crown, her villanelle, her prose poems, and the musical opus that is the gorgeously long title poem. But I am most impressed by how Hembree manages all of this while also daring to write a poetry so sharp and bare it aims at nothing but the heart." - Jericho Brown

"Startling poems. A wondrous recreation of form." - Toi Derricotte

"A high-voltage talent, Hembree harnesses the fevered elements of what's given—fraught landscape, fraught heart—because to do otherwise is to live (and write) a lie that denies love its innately fuguelike truth. These poems spun my reading swiftly into awe." - Katie Ford

"The long poem 'For Today' is a brilliant, existential tour de force. I read it in one sitting. I couldn't stop. And it gives me that sense that I experience with the very best poems, that I'm not reading them so much as living them." - Rodney Jones

"For Today is a sensuous, extended meditation on intergenerational succession: the perils and ecstasies of raising a child in a time of dying parents, of trying to care for dying parents while raising a child. Inger Christensen is Hembree's day-sign here, and Rilke her night-sign, but the title poem is very much its own achievement, one of the most ambitious long poems in recent American poetry. It is an extraordinary testimony of resilience, troubled immanence, and the ferocity of love." - G. C. Waldrep

ISBN: 9780807181423

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 6mm

Weight: 272g

106 pages