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Blossom as the Cliffrose
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An anthology of strikingly diverse poems and prose from inheritors of Mormon traditions edited by Danielle Dubrasky and Karin Anderson.
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08 June 2021

"Danielle Beazer Dubrasky and Karin Anderson are expert guides to this territory. Let them and this book bring you home."
—JOANNA BROOKS
Blossom as the Cliffrose: Mormon Legacies and the Beckoning Wild features original poems and prose by writers who are faithful, non–faithful, believers, heretics, converts and de–converts, dragged in or forced out of the Mormon faith. This dynamic collection demonstrates the breadth, complexity, and diversity of a Latter–day Saint legacy of commitment to natural place and challenges readers to examine the myriad ways deeply rooted heritage shapes personal relationship with landscape.
—JOANNA BROOKS
Blossom as the Cliffrose: Mormon Legacies and the Beckoning Wild features original poems and prose by writers who are faithful, non–faithful, believers, heretics, converts and de–converts, dragged in or forced out of the Mormon faith. This dynamic collection demonstrates the breadth, complexity, and diversity of a Latter–day Saint legacy of commitment to natural place and challenges readers to examine the myriad ways deeply rooted heritage shapes personal relationship with landscape.
Price: $21.95
Pages: 417
Publisher: Torrey House Press
Imprint: Torrey House Press
Publication Date:
08 June 2021
Trim Size: 8.00 X 5.25 in
ISBN: 9781948814423
Format: Paperback
BISACs:
LITERARY COLLECTIONS / Essays, LITERARY COLLECTIONS / American / General, NATURE / Environmental Conservation & Protection, RELIGION / Christianity / Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon), POETRY / Anthologies (multiple authors)
"Meditative and energizing, fierce and loving, balanced and rhythmic. An invitation to welcome faith and nature, and to embrace the tensions and beauty that spring from every crack and cranny along the way."
—FOREWORD REVIEWS
"When I ask my Mormon–Jewish daughter when she feels most Mormon, she tells me, 'When I am outside, in the canyons, in the mountains, in the West.' The beloved community of writers assembled here articulates a thousand reasons why so many of us feel this way. Danielle Beazer Dubrasky and Karin Anderson are expert guides to this territory. Let them and this book bring you home."
—JOANNA BROOKS, author of The Book of Mormon Girl and coeditor of Mormon Feminisms and Decolonizing Mormonism
"No idea looms larger in the Mormon mind than wilderness—a pure, unspoiled place that gives people refuge and prepares them for revelation. Blossom as the Cliffrose gathers some of Mormonism's most creative voices to testify to the power of wilderness spaces—in the land, in our faith, and in our lives. The essays and poems in this volume come from the heart of the wilderness and are themselves both refuge and revelation."
—MICHAEL AUSTIN, author of Reading the World and Buried Treasures
—FOREWORD REVIEWS
"When I ask my Mormon–Jewish daughter when she feels most Mormon, she tells me, 'When I am outside, in the canyons, in the mountains, in the West.' The beloved community of writers assembled here articulates a thousand reasons why so many of us feel this way. Danielle Beazer Dubrasky and Karin Anderson are expert guides to this territory. Let them and this book bring you home."
—JOANNA BROOKS, author of The Book of Mormon Girl and coeditor of Mormon Feminisms and Decolonizing Mormonism
"No idea looms larger in the Mormon mind than wilderness—a pure, unspoiled place that gives people refuge and prepares them for revelation. Blossom as the Cliffrose gathers some of Mormonism's most creative voices to testify to the power of wilderness spaces—in the land, in our faith, and in our lives. The essays and poems in this volume come from the heart of the wilderness and are themselves both refuge and revelation."
—MICHAEL AUSTIN, author of Reading the World and Buried Treasures
KARIN ANDERSON is a professor of English at Utah Valley University where she focuses on creative writing, lit theory, wilderness and environmental writing, LGBTQ lit, contemporary narrative genres, and honor legacies. She has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and holds degrees from Utah State University, Brigham Young University, and the University of Utah. The author of the novel Before Us Like a Land of Dreams, she hails from the Great Basin of Utah.
DANIELLE BEAZER DUBRASKY directs the Grace A. Tanner Center for Human Values and is an associate professor of creative writing at Southern Utah University. Danielle holds a PhD in creative writing from the University of Utah and an MA in English/creative writing from Stanford. She is lead author of a poetry curriculum published by the Journal of Poetry Therapy and a two–time winner of the Utah Division of Arts and Museums original writing competition in poetry. Her chapbook, Ruin and Light, won the 2014 Anabiosis Press Chapbook Competition and her poems were published in Invisible Shores, a limited edition artist book from Red Butte Press. She lives in Cedar City, Utah.
DANIELLE BEAZER DUBRASKY directs the Grace A. Tanner Center for Human Values and is an associate professor of creative writing at Southern Utah University. Danielle holds a PhD in creative writing from the University of Utah and an MA in English/creative writing from Stanford. She is lead author of a poetry curriculum published by the Journal of Poetry Therapy and a two–time winner of the Utah Division of Arts and Museums original writing competition in poetry. Her chapbook, Ruin and Light, won the 2014 Anabiosis Press Chapbook Competition and her poems were published in Invisible Shores, a limited edition artist book from Red Butte Press. She lives in Cedar City, Utah.