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  1. Mad River
    Author: Beatty, Jan
    Published: 1996
    Publisher:  University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh PA ; ProQuest, Ann Arbor, Michigan

    "In every poem, she keeps her fury contained, but omnipresent, so that it resembles a cornered dog's warning growl, yet she hints of happier possibilities." --Booklist"Beatty does offer deeply visceral and sensory work, especially in the second and... more

    Universität Mainz, Zentralbibliothek
    No inter-library loan

     

    "In every poem, she keeps her fury contained, but omnipresent, so that it resembles a cornered dog's warning growl, yet she hints of happier possibilities." --Booklist"Beatty does offer deeply visceral and sensory work, especially in the second and third sections of this three-part book. . . . She risks relative boldness and deep emotional commitment, disregarding political correctness in respect for this less readily sanitized realm of experience." --Publishers Weekly"Her poems speak to us head-on, with courage and a contemporaneous eloquence." --Yusef Komunyakaa"Raw, energetic, gritty, risky, sexy, and real. . . . The power of these short narratives is often cumulative, building a vision of the world seen through the eyes of a wanderer, a woman, a waitress." --Dorianne LauxJan Beatty, winner of the 2000 Creative Achievement Award from the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust, has also won two fellowships from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts. She has held jobs as a welfare caseworker, a rape counselor, and a nurse's aide. She has worked in maximum security prisons, hoagie huts, burger joints, jazz clubs, and diners. Her chapbook, Ravenous, won the 1995 State Street Press Chapbook Prize. Her latest collection, Boneshaker, was published in 2002 by the University of Pittsburgh Press.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780822990840
    Series: Pitt Poetry Series
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (77 pages)
    Notes:

    Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources

  2. Mad river
    Author: Beatty, Jan
    Published: ©1995
    Publisher:  University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh

    ""In every poem, she keeps her fury contained, but omnipresent, so that it resembles a cornered dog's warning growl, yet she hints of happier possibilities."" --Booklist""Beatty does offer deeply visceral and sensory work, especially in the second... more

    Hochschulbibliothek Friedensau
    Online-Ressource
    No inter-library loan

     

    ""In every poem, she keeps her fury contained, but omnipresent, so that it resembles a cornered dog's warning growl, yet she hints of happier possibilities."" --Booklist""Beatty does offer deeply visceral and sensory work, especially in the second and third sections of this three-part book. . . . She risks relative boldness and deep emotional commitment, disregarding political correctness in respect for this less readily sanitized realm of experience."" --Publishers Weekly""Her poems speak to us head-on, with courage and a contemporaneous eloquence."" --Yusef Komunyakaa""Raw, energetic, gritty

     

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    Content information
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 0822990849; 9780822990840
    Parent title: In: 20th century American poetry (Online);
    Series: Pitt poetry series
    Subjects: American poetry
    Scope: Online-Ressource (63 pages)
    Notes:

    Use copy Restrictions unspecified star MiAaHDL

    Electronic reproduction

    Contents; I; If This Is Sex, It Must Be Tuesday; Mad River; Grabbing at Beauty; What We Can Count On; The Rolling Rock Man; Pittsburgh Poem; The Order of Things; 1,200 lb. Man Starts on Road to 190 lbs.; Fifteen Minutes at the Dairy Mart; Ravenous Blue; Leonard Avenue; II; Highway 99; Getting Through; Letter to Mario; As If That's All There Is; Awake in a Strange Landscape; An Abortion Attempt by my Mother; Morning Radio; fifteen; Ferry at Night; Watching My Father; Fog; Dream with No Words; Sucking; Self-Hatred; Walking in Shade; Wanting to Continue; III; Saving the Crippled Boy; What I Want

    Introducing You to My Dead FatherBreaking the Skin; after sex on a train; Love Poem; Visiting My Father a Few Days Before His Operation; Ghost Orchid; The Space That Remains; A Waitress' Instructions on Tipping orGet the Cash Up and Don't Waste My Time; T-shirts; Standing by the McKenzie River at Night; Blue Dress; Not Thinking About Gardenias; Asking the Dead for Help; The Flower Garden; One Hand on the Door; Free World; Acknowledgments