Dwellers in the House of the Lord

Wesley McNair author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:David R. Godine Publisher Inc

Published:21st May '20

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Dwellers in the House of the Lord cover

Serial rights to Ted Kooser's syndicated print and online column, American Life in Poetry, April 2020.

A book to restore your faith in love's strength to unite us.

A New England Book Award Finalist. “There's so much life in this beautiful book that it feels like a living thing. Wesley McNair is a kind of Chekhov of American poetry.”—Ted Kooser, Pulitzer Prize winner and Poet Laureate.

Wesley McNair is a poet, memorist, and storyteller. His stories are personal and yet speak to our most urgent, universal, concerns. As he writes...

For we are all born into exile, saved only by the homes
we dream, and the love that we may find there.


Set in rural Virginia, the poet’s younger sister Aimee is adrift in a difficult marriage to Mike, a Trump-supporting, church-going, off-the-grid gun shop owner. McNair brilliantly explores his sister’s life, his own family’s past, to seek understanding. Throughout, this marvelous work, McNair attests to patience and perseverance, and an unwavering belief in compassion and reconciliation, in love’s ability to unite us, even amidst the ugly politics of our time.

Dwellers in the House of the Lord is for anyone who loves poetry’s unique power, in the hands of a master, to tell stories of our lives.

Praise for Wesley McNair

“One of the great storytellers of contemporary poetry.”—Philip Levine, Poet Laureate and Pulitzer Prize-winner

“Because he is a true poet, his New England is unlimited. Whole lives fill small lines, real to this poet, therefore to us.”—Donald Hall, Harvard Book Review

Dwellers in the House of the Lord: “There’s so much life in this beautiful book that it feels like a living thing. Wesley McNair is a kind of Chekhov of American poetry.”—Ted Kooser, Pulitzer Prize winner and Poet Laureate

The Ghosts of Me and You: “McNair’s poems are full of people with lives like his own, like ours, ordinary lives that are incredibly unique and complex.”—Louis McKee, Library Journal

The Unfastening: “A distinctly New England strain of candor and restraint and a walloping matter-of-factness.”—The Boston Globe

The Town of No & My Brother Running: “McNair is one of the only handful of younger poets willing to take risks. This is, without a doubt, one of the year’s best poetry collections.”—ALA Booklist

ISBN: 9781567926637

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

64 pages