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Spiral Trace
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With one eye unflinchingly trained on his own mortality, a soulful philosopher-poet laments a ravaged planet.A treatise on aging provokes a searing examination of a modern world defined by an erodi...
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“Haunted by historical drama, Marshall goes zero to sixty from lyrical ...
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Format:
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Publication Date: 28 May 2013
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ISBN: 9781566893275
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Pages: 248
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Imprint: Coffee House Press

With one eye unflinchingly trained on his own mortality, a soulful philosopher-poet laments a ravaged planet.
A treatise on aging provokes a searing examination of a modern world defined by an eroding environment and hawkish, endless war. Offering a tribute to the insights gained in the dénouement of his life, this is beautifully minimalist poetry that shines a light on the possibilities of renewal by calling on art to provide “a wake-up to being.”
A treatise on aging provokes a searing examination of a modern world defined by an eroding environment and hawkish, endless war. Offering a tribute to the insights gained in the dénouement of his life, this is beautifully minimalist poetry that shines a light on the possibilities of renewal by calling on art to provide “a wake-up to being.”
Price: $17.95
Pages: 248
Publisher: Coffee House Press
Imprint: Coffee House Press
Publication Date:
28 May 2013
Trim Size: 8.25 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9781566893275
Format: Paperback
“Haunted by historical drama, Marshall goes zero to sixty from lyrical riffs of gorgeous sweetness . . . to straight-talk the woes at large of the human condition.” —The Northern California Book Awards
“[Marshall] understands that all worlds, the material and the spiritual, are one, and that the neighborhoods and cities that no longer exist can be conjured by memory and reanimated by art.” —The San Francisco Chronicle
“Marshall’s ability to move the astronomic to the microscopic in a matter of a few syllables presents the book’s most uncanny accomplishment.” —Booklist
“Spiral Trace explores the contemporary world in all its vainglory in a rush of language, sometimes somber or lyrical, more often racy, slangy, humorous. . . . A perfect poem for and of the times.” —The Berkeley Daily Planet
“Jack Marshall is one of our unheralded masters, which Spiral Trace demonstrates on almost every page. . . .This is a terrific book, and Marshall is an American treasure.” —Stephen Dunn
“Jack Marshall’s poetry, which combines the personal and the political in a unique way, is both hard and beautiful. He has reached the age where memory comes flooding in but he refuses self-pity by virtue of his brilliant language, and his use of form. Most of all by a sheer love of life. An extraordinary poet.” —Gerald Stern
“[Marshall] understands that all worlds, the material and the spiritual, are one, and that the neighborhoods and cities that no longer exist can be conjured by memory and reanimated by art.” —The San Francisco Chronicle
“Marshall’s ability to move the astronomic to the microscopic in a matter of a few syllables presents the book’s most uncanny accomplishment.” —Booklist
“Spiral Trace explores the contemporary world in all its vainglory in a rush of language, sometimes somber or lyrical, more often racy, slangy, humorous. . . . A perfect poem for and of the times.” —The Berkeley Daily Planet
“Jack Marshall is one of our unheralded masters, which Spiral Trace demonstrates on almost every page. . . .This is a terrific book, and Marshall is an American treasure.” —Stephen Dunn
“Jack Marshall’s poetry, which combines the personal and the political in a unique way, is both hard and beautiful. He has reached the age where memory comes flooding in but he refuses self-pity by virtue of his brilliant language, and his use of form. Most of all by a sheer love of life. An extraordinary poet.” —Gerald Stern
Born in Brooklyn to Jewish parents who emigrated from Iraq and Syria, Jack Marshall now lives in California. He is the author of the memoir From Baghdad to Brooklyn and several poetry collections that have received the PEN Center USA Award, two Northern California Book Awards, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a nomination from the National Book Critics Circle.