| Walking
Through the Horizon
Poems by Margaret Holley
The
adventure of moving, the meaning of home
Attachment
to the familiar and the challenge of leaving it for new horizons
link the poems in this collection by Margaret Holley. The
poems are full of feeling and wisdom in equal parts, and are
enriched and informed by the poet’s landscape, whether
it is Switzerland or Arizona. The landscape, in fact, becomes
a kind of mirror we gaze into to see the future that at every
turn is approaching and moving through us to illuminate the
past.
The
journey of this book shows how the conditions of our lives
are illumined by our cultural forbears—Goethe, Chopin,
Nietzsche, Bonnard, Klee—by the heritage of personal
memory, and by the ever amazing “book of nature.”
A book remarkable for the complete authenticity of its feeling
and candor, Walking Through the Horizon shows us
the simultaneity of the past and the future and is grounds
for hopefulness and joy: “These are gifts worth passing
on: / the beckoning vista, the sudden frontier, / the rivers
of days and years to come.”
“In
her beautiful new collection of poems Margaret Holley writes
with a rare and compelling intensity of her move to a new
city and a new life. She does this by creating vivid contrasts
between dailiness and an expansive vision beyond it—the
immediate, sometimes chaotic, world of the present and the
permanence of art and myth.”
—Grace
Schulman
“Holley
deserves a wider audience.”
—Mary Oliver, author
of Why I Wake Early
“Margaret
Holley’s new poems seem to partake both of the leaf-shadow
of the old Northeast and of the stunned sunlight of the new
Southwest. The scars of ordinary human experience are everywhere
apparent, but are ameliorated by the balance and temperance
of her language. Holley’s westward migration, in Walking
Through the Horizon, is a quintessentially American passage
out of childhood and into adulthood.”
—Karl
Kirchwey, author of The Engrafted Word and At
the Palace of Jove
Margaret
Holley works in Scottsdale, Arizona, for the
American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science.
She was formerly director of the creative writing program
at Bryn Mawr. Her previous poetry collections are The
Smoke Tree (Winner of the Bluestem Award), Morning
Star, Kore in Bloom, and Beyond Me. She is also
the author of The Poetry of Marianne Moore: A Study in
Voice and Value.
March
2006
96 pages
5 1/2" x 8 1/2"
$16.95 (s) Paper
ISBN-10: 1-55728-812-7
ISBN-13: 978-1-55728-812-7
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