Today's poem is "In Search of the Wild Dulcimer"
from Blood Harmony
Lana Austin
's poems and short stories have recently been featured in Mid-American Review, Sou'wester, The Chariton Review, Columbia Journal, Zone 3, Appalachian Heritage, The Pinch, The New Guard, Switchback, Bloodroot, Pine Mountain Sand & Gravel, Southern Women's Review, and others. Born and raised in rural Kentucky, Austin studied creative writing at both Hollins University and the University of Mary Washington as an undergraduate and has an MFA from George Mason University (2008). Her chapbook, In Search of the Wild Dulcimer, is from Finishing Line Press (2016). Austin has lived in England, Italy, and Washington, DC, but she currently resides in Alabama, where she is an adjunct instructor in the English department at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. Also a journalist, Austin has written for numerous newspapers and magazines
Books by Lana Austin:
Other poems on the web by Lana Austin:
Three poems
Lana Austin's Website.
Lana Austin According to Wikipedia.
About Blood Harmony:
"An ecclesiastical thread runs through this fine book, in that everything has its season, and everything—including joy and grief—goes together. Austin's poems achieve through their own high and lonesome registers what we expect from the best blues or hillbilly music: the human experience in this weary world is affirmed, even dignified. I am glad these refreshing, bone- and blood-deep poems are in the world."
"Blood Harmony introduces a lively new voice to Appalachian poetry. Lana K. W. Austin celebrates the bonds of memory and blood in poems of both harmony and drama, remembering the blood spilled in the coalfields, and the struggles of families with loyalty and courage. The poems pay tribute to the place and soul of the region, the music of blending voices, adolescent desire, and the exuberance of motherhood, the enduring legacy of Jean Ritchie and Bill Monroe, and the mountains where the music was born."
"The great circle is unbroken in Lana Austin's first full-length collection, Blood Harmony. The arc of mothering and hard unmothering, Kentucky floods and wanton drink, the luthier one with the carved grain and sorrowed ballads. In poems birthed from paradox, Austin's fierce coupling of alto and effervescence infuses and uplifts family and community portraits and tributes to the high lonesome of her upbringing—Jean Ritchie, Bill Monroe, Emmylou Harris. Her own unshakable voice prevails amid the downbeat of wounded genealogy, love's aching counterpoint and antidote to loss. So put your hands on the radio still warm and faintly glowing, scoot closer to hear Austin's 'damned salvation of sound.' The circle thrums as it bends toward that stubbornly joyful noise, the chord so deep and alive within us."
"Walt Whitman once advised young poets to 'Be outrageous! Be outrageous! But not too damned outrageous.' Lana Austin's Blood Harmony has exactly that balance of old and new, of the immediate and the distant, of challenge and embrace. Her Kentucky landscape shows as familiar as a family heirloom and the music of her poems is as clear as a harpsichord in a meadow. This first collection reminds us how the soul is always seeking, in its dream of place, the final character of one's identity, one's home. The Gospel says abide and these poems are enactments with bold, electric, convincing authority. Lana Austin's is a new country music worthy of a great readership. Let it be."
"Attentive to history, place, pitch and character, the poems of Lana Austin's Blood Harmony find bonds in music that dovetail with chords in family and community. Her lovely and passionate verses interweave precise knowledge of traditional mountain and CW music with marvelous invention which renders a mandolin 'an amulet of sound' and describes listeners to Emmylou Harris as 'embered… into incandescence.' These poems are handmade and heart-carved with a luthier's canny expertise. Anyone wishing to go, as her opening poem invites, 'In Search of the Wild Dulcimer' need look no farther than this collection where kindred sounds blend beyond description. In thrall to depths of the spirit, her poems are also sweetly free. Blood Harmony will make you sigh and sob, clap and stomp."
Maurice Manning
Robert Morgan
Linda Parsons
Dave Smith
R. T. Smith
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