*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.
Review final details at checkout.
About The Book
Description
Author
<p>This is the infrastructure of a poet's life. A kid in love reading to his first-grade teacher. An old man walking with friends in an Oregon forest. A carpenter on the courthouse steps telling how to build a place of refuge. With his wife Jenny hearing war planes over a desert hot spring.&nbsp;</p><p>On Nascar Demolition Derby Night at the Modoc County Fair. It was better than the Iraq War. No one was killed. Admission was only eight dollars.&nbsp;</p><p>A poem uncovers the underworld's plot to overthrow Christmas and capitalism. Another records a watershed meeting the multi-species discussion of whether to let the humans in. In a state park on an overgrown trail crossing a rotten bridge the title poem tries to answer Jenny's question: <em>how did it get like this?</em> A poem requested for a friend whose young son just died in a senseless accident.&nbsp;</p><p>The infrastructure we turn to: fledgling swallows on a power line big mouths pale fluff scared and hungry. How soon they'll fly and be gone. We live in a nest of broken shells. On the Big Island a quarter-mile-long ten-foot wall huge carved blocks of lava yet with a wide open gate to those seeking refuge.&nbsp;On the eastern slope of the Sierras a circular pool of concrete and stone three Vietnam vets soak in our common history. In a repair shop on Broadway LouAnn who has small hands is&nbsp;replacing a burned-out headlight. I can't even get to it. The other guy in the waiting room has just come from taking his wife to the cancer clinic. We talk about when cars were real.&nbsp;Looking for infrastructure in a world that's been designed to break and not be fixed.</p>