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The Mansion of Happiness (VQR Poetry)

by Robin Ekiss

The Mansion of Happiness (VQR Poetry) Cover

 

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

Robin Ekiss's meditations on memory and mortality are a canary in the coal mine of imagination. With disembodied dolls, dank Parisian catacombs, the gilded interior of a Fabergé egg, and the unfathomable edge of Niagara Falls as the dominion of these poems, reading Ekiss's work is like peering into the perfectly still world of a diorama or daguerreotype: an experience both uncanny and uncompromising.

Review:

"Dolls, collectibles, children's games and other sorts of miniatures — both playful and creepy, elegant and disheveled — dominate this haunting debut, which takes its title from a 19th-century board game, and its artful goals, in part, from the best of Sylvia Plath. 'Unable to look at anything/ without a stone's sense of gravity,/ I can still hold your body in one hand': so Ekiss writes in 'Conversation with Doll,' a title that could fit more than a few of her poems. 'World without Birds' begins amid 'cagelings like goldfinch/ embalmed in wax'; 'The Opposite of the Body' concludes, 'The pleasure in being a woman's// knowing everything's borrowed/ and can't be denied,// as when you take apart a clock,/ there's always another inside.' As in Plath, a drive toward impersonality, toward elegant sculptural symbols, pulls against another drive to present the messy fears and desires of family life, of mother and daughter and father, of women and men. The results can seem claustrophobic, or even monotonous; if a few poems repeat one another, Ekiss has cut to the bone within each one. She sometimes tries too hard for a recognizable style; some readers may wonder where she can go from here. Others, though, will find the poems hard to forget." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)

About the Author

Robin Ekiss has received a Stegner Fellowship from Stanford and a Rona Jaffe Foundation Award for Emerging Women Writers. Her poems have appeared widely, in the Atlantic Monthly, Poetry, American Poetry Review, Ploughshares, New England Review, and elsewhere. She lives in San Francisco, California.

Product Details

ISBN:
9780820334080
Author:
Ekiss, Robin
Publisher:
University of Georgia Press
Subject:
American - General
Subject:
Poetry-A to Z
Subject:
Single Author / American
Copyright:
Edition Description:
Trade Paper
Series:
The VQR Poetry Series
Publication Date:
20091131
Binding:
TRADE PAPER
Language:
English
Pages:
64
Dimensions:
8.5 x 5.5 in 0.31 lb

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The Mansion of Happiness (VQR Poetry) Used Trade Paper
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Product details 64 pages University of Georgia Press - English 9780820334080 Reviews:
"Publishers Weekly Review" by , "Dolls, collectibles, children's games and other sorts of miniatures — both playful and creepy, elegant and disheveled — dominate this haunting debut, which takes its title from a 19th-century board game, and its artful goals, in part, from the best of Sylvia Plath. 'Unable to look at anything/ without a stone's sense of gravity,/ I can still hold your body in one hand': so Ekiss writes in 'Conversation with Doll,' a title that could fit more than a few of her poems. 'World without Birds' begins amid 'cagelings like goldfinch/ embalmed in wax'; 'The Opposite of the Body' concludes, 'The pleasure in being a woman's// knowing everything's borrowed/ and can't be denied,// as when you take apart a clock,/ there's always another inside.' As in Plath, a drive toward impersonality, toward elegant sculptural symbols, pulls against another drive to present the messy fears and desires of family life, of mother and daughter and father, of women and men. The results can seem claustrophobic, or even monotonous; if a few poems repeat one another, Ekiss has cut to the bone within each one. She sometimes tries too hard for a recognizable style; some readers may wonder where she can go from here. Others, though, will find the poems hard to forget." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)
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