Synopses & Reviews
Poetry. As well as publishing in some of the best literary magazines in the country, Paul Hunter's poems tend to show up in places like the Small Farmer's Journal next to articles on practical horsefarming. It's this real-world connection to the land and workers of the land that has made him such a beloved poet, earning him prizes as diverse as the Pym Cup, the Nelson Bentley Award, and the Washington Book Award. "Hunter's call and recall of an unmechanized world is visionary and realistic"--Marie Ponsot. Hunter lives, works, publishes Wood Works press, and makes musical instruments in Seattle. In 2007, he was featured on the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.
Synopsis
Poetry. RIPENING is a full landscape of poems packed with live beings dancing to the tunefulness of change. These true poems show an America before Agribiz: men, boys, a few acutely cherished girls, all workers, enduring winter till it topples over into spring among wells and woodlots in their strenuous beauty, harsh and worthy. Hunter's call and recall of an unmechanized world is visionary and realistic.--Marie Ponsot
About the Author
Paul Hunter has been poet, teacher, performer, playwright, musician, instrument-maker, artist, editor, publisher, grassroots arts activist, worker on the land, and shade-tree mechanic. For the past twelve years he has produced fine letterpress books under the imprint of Wood Works-currently including 23 books and 5o broadsides. His poems have appeared in Beloit Poetry Journal, Bloomsbury Review, Iowa Review, North American Review, Poetry, Poetry Northwest, Raven Chronicles and The Southern Review, as well as in three full-length books and several chapbooks. Recipient of the 1998 Pym Cup, the 1999 Nelson Bentley Award, and the 2005 Washington Book Award, he lives and works in Seattle.