| 

|
The
Coal Life
Poems by Adam Vines
Finalist:
2012 Miller Williams Poetry Prize |
“Mined
from linguistic, literary, and historical underworlds.”
“Adam
Vines’s command of the sounds of the English language
is delicious, but it never prettifies what he sees in the
world. These are poems of real life and of the physical condition
of being alive in all its joy and difficulty. A hardscrabble
childhood, a self-demanding adulthood, both emerge in poems
full of fine ironies and a mature acceptance.”
—Mary Jo Salter, author of A Phone Call to the Future:
New and Selected Poems
“Arguably
the finest metaphor in The Coal Life is found in a dynamite
box: a mine rat’s nest of ‘chewed scripture and
company scrip.’ But in every poem, Adam Vines balances
a tension perfect as it is uneasy—between life’s
‘urge for change, flight, and sex’ and the more
patient resolve of faith in a world beyond ‘the mutable
zodiac’ of this hard-wrought human universe. Perhaps
these poems were conceived in the ‘shadow myth of ruins,’
but they emerge as the best poems do—‘leaning
to the light.’ The Coal Life is remarkable—and
necessary.”
—Claudia Emerson, author of Figure Studies: Poems
“Adam
Vines’s The Coal Life is a book mined from
linguistic, literary, and historical underworlds. These poems
keenly observe and deeply ponder; they dig into the mineral
dark of memory, uncovering along the way forgotten and abandoned
voices, idioms, occupations, thwarted desires, moments of
grace in misery, and accidents of astounding beauty. An extraordinary
first collection, The Coal Life is built to last
even while it rests upon ‘the shadow myth of ruins.’”
—Alan Shapiro, author of Old War: Poems
In many
of the poems in The Coal Life, Adam Vines, an avid
outdoorsman and former professional landscaper for nearly
twenty years, explores the cultural landscape of Alabama coal-mining
camps in the first half of the twentieth century and how the
industry can shape and distort a cultural text similar to
the way it contorts and upturns the physical landscape. Other
poems in the collection—some autobiographical, some
assuming the personae of voices as varied as Gauguin, Magritte’s
Daemon, Georg Cantor, post-Eden Adam, Hamlet, and an old fisherman
railing against new-fangled technology—express how we
are all mining our memories, our cultures, and the natural
world in an attempt to grope toward identity. Vines reminds
us that poetry embodies and preserves transient emotion, perception,
and flesh just as coal compacts and ossifies the vitality
of an ancient landscape, and he reveals that the charge of
the poet is to mine language, extract it and haul it to the
surface, separate from it what is useless, and palm what will
rekindle the fire of living experience.
The Coal Life is part of the University of Arkansas
Press Poetry series, edited by Enid Shomer.
Adam
Vines is assistant professor of English at
the University of Alabama at Birmingham and editor of the
Birmingham Poetry Review. His poems have been published in
Poetry, North American Review, The Cincinnati Review, and
The Greensboro Review.
February
5 1/2 x 8 1/2, 67 pages
$16.00 paper
978-1-55728-980-3
|




|