In <i>Climbing a Burning Rope</i>, John Paul Davis focuses his peculiar imagination, philosophical lyricism, and misfit spiritual outlook on life in the hypercapitalist twenty-first century where the inscrutable logic of algorithms haunts our constantly connected selves. Celebrating the weird and wild, lamenting wounds and weariness, Davis’s poems carve out a space in which we can reclaim what is sacred and be reminded to keep something of ourselves for ourselves.
Sobre el autor
<b>John Paul Davis </b>is the author of <i>Crown Prince of Rabbits</i>, and his poems have appeared in <i>RATTLE</i>, <i>Bennington Review</i>, <i>Maine Review</i>, <i>MUZZLE</i>, <i>The Journal</i>, and many others. His writing is informed by the many odd jobs he has held, including bike messenger, line cook, warehouse manager, roller-rink deejay, college professor, stablehand, paperboy, soundman, and bookseller, among others. He now works as a web developer and lives in New York City.