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Walter McDonald (1) (1934–)

Autor von Rafting the Brazos

Andere Autoren mit dem Namen Walter McDonald findest Du auf der Unterscheidungs-Seite.

18+ Werke 65 Mitglieder 2 Rezensionen

Werke von Walter McDonald

Rafting the Brazos (1988) 9 Exemplare
Night Landings: Poems (1989) 8 Exemplare
A Band of Brothers (1989) 5 Exemplare
The Flying Dutchman (1987) 5 Exemplare
After the Noise of Saigon (1988) 3 Exemplare
Texas stories & poems (1978) 3 Exemplare
Burning the Fence (1981) 2 Exemplare
All Occasions (2000) 2 Exemplare
Anything, Anything: Poems (1980) 2 Exemplare
Witching on Hardscrabble (1986) 2 Exemplare

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Against Forgetting: Twentieth-Century Poetry of Witness (1993) — Mitwirkender — 334 Exemplare

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I never quite know how to write about poetry. It's such a different kind of animal. I first heard of Walt McDonald's work when Garrison Keillor read a poem from this volume, COUNTING SURVIVORS, on The Writer's Almanac a few months ago. I can't remember now which one it was. Maybe this one, called "Out of the Stone They Come" -

"My son hung a framed painting
on his wall. Head down, a man my age
leans on black granite. A soldier
holds out a ghostly hand to touch him.

Others beyond the wall look out,
young as my son in their helmets.
Out of the stone they've come
with incredibly young arms

because he's here, head bowed,
surviving ..."

If this isn't the one Keillor read that morning, it doesn't matter, because it's powerful enough in its imagery, in its grief. I've been at that black granite wall, many years ago, and it is indeed filled with ghosts. Or it may have been "What if I Didn't Die Outside Saigon," an equally moving piece on nightmares of war and gratitude for second chances.

Walt McDonald was a pilot in Vietnam and went on to a very distinguished career as a poet and professor at Texas Tech. He was also Texas's Poet Laureate in 2001. Many of the poems here reflect his childhood and youth in Texas - brief meditations on drought-ravaged ranches and failed farms gone to auction, which brought to mind his fellow Texan, Elmer Kelton, and his novel, THE TIME IT NEVER RAINED. There are poems of grandfathers, uncles, and older brothers, many of them permanently scarred by wars and personal losses.

Other poems ponder the mysteries of getting old. In "Living in Old Adobe," for example -

"... The porch swing groans
on hooks as old as us. Granddaddy
built this porch to last, oak planks
imported from forests. How many nights
did they rock here, seeing the stars we see?

Did they hope a burly grandson
would hold his own wife close on chains
we didn't hang? Now we're their age,
or older. Grandchildren we adore
are sleeping tonight in Dallas."

Like most books of poetry, COUNTING SURVIVORS is a slim volume, not even a hundred pages, that doesn't take long to read. But the words, so carefully chosen and placed, will resonate and linger. Powerful stuff, Walt. Thank you.
… (mehr)
 
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TimBazzett | Jan 5, 2016 |
My current favorite, rarely have I found a book where pictures and poems complement each other they way it happens here, evoking a feeling of loneliness, modesty, passing, in the best traditions of haiki. Limited in length, poems are up to a page of print, and just about right. Wonderful book.
 
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andreas.wpv | Feb 20, 2011 |

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Werke
18
Auch von
2
Mitglieder
65
Beliebtheit
#261,994
Bewertung
4.2
Rezensionen
2
ISBNs
39

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