Today's poem is "Sleep"
from Fire
Wesley McNair
's poems appear in five book-length collections, the last four of
which, including Fire, have been published by David R. Godine. A recipient of grants
from the Rockefeller, Fulbright, and Guggenheim foundations, he has won two NEA fellowships,
the Eunice Tietjens Prize from Poetry magazine, and the Theodore Roethke Prize from
Poetry Northwest. He is the author of a volume of essays on place and poetry,
Mapping the Heart, and the editor of The Quotable Moose, an anthology of contemporary
Maine writing. The director of the creative writing program at the University of Maine in
Farmington, he teaches in the Stonecoast MFA program.
About Fire:
In this collection, Wesley McNair's fifth, he writes on a wide range of subjects, from
cigarette-smoking in old movies, to an executive's torments in hell, to sobering memories of
childhood and youth. The book culminates with the ambitious and moving title piece, a narrative
about a family's destruction, a son's attempt at reconciliation with his mother, and their trip
across the country to a family reunion and her revealing past. Fire is one of McNair's
most beautifully constructed volumes of poetry, exquisite not only in the careful balance of
its structure of long poems against short, of personal against universal, of descriptive
against reflective but also in the authentic cadence of a true New England voice that
resounds through every line.
Praise for previous volumes by Wesley McNair:
The Town of No:
"He has a gorgeous ear for the rubbing-together of adjacent words...McNair is a New England
poet, preserving the speech and character of a region intimately known. Because he is a true
poet, his New England is unlimited. Whole lives fill small lines, real to this poet and real
to us."
My Brother Running:
Talking in the Dark:
(from the book jacket)
Donald Hall
"Not a word is out of place...whatever regional cast the poems have is much less noticeable
than the powerful moments of realization and description that make these poems live."
Henry Taylor, The Washington Times
"...one of the year's most significant poetic achievements."
The Minneapolis Star Tribune
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