Stylistically innovative, deeply moving, carefully researched, Martha Collins’s eleventh volume of poetry combines her well-known attention to social issues with the elegiac mode of her previous book. She focuses here on race, gun violence, recent wars, and, in an extended sequence, the history of coal—first as her ancestors mined it, then from its geological origins to our ecologically threatened present. <i>Casualty Reports</i> is both indictment and lament, a work that speaks forcefully to our troubled history and our present times.
Giới thiệu về tác giả
<b>Martha Collins </b>is the author of ten previous collections of poetry, most recently <i>Because What Else Could I Do</i>, which won the Poetry Society of America’s William Carlos Williams Award. Previous volumes include <i>Blue Front</i>, <i>White Papers</i>, <i>Admit One: An American Scrapbook</i>, and the paired volumes <i>Day unto Day</i> and <i>Night unto Night.</i> She has also cotranslated four volumes of Vietnamese poetry and coedited several anthologies.