Trapline


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Piracy-free
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Assured Quality
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Secure Transactions
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Fast Delivery
Sustainably Printed
Sustainably Printed
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About The Book

In Caroline Goodwins Trapline natures flux and torque are embodied in a language that is taut luscious and musical. These are poems of rot and salt dragonflies and kinked reeds where the world is always with us - raw and omnipresent beautiful and terrible. Here poems navigate physical and metaphysical landscapes embodying experience and a world both awful and awe-full: when the mind / has grown plumes delicate / as tubeworms in the driftwood / in the sponge and scarlet / blood star tough as tongues / as the sea whip clicking. Even when examining minutiae Goodwins poems retain the largeness of the world they articulate. And like the world they both describe and inhabit us. This is wonderful searing necessary work; we read it and we pause and we see ourselves differently. -- Donna de la PerrièreAlaska native Caroline Goodwins first poetry book Trapline (Jackleg Press) is set at the edge-of the sea the swamp the wilderness. To get a feel for her poetry imagine yourself walking along the shore encountering rot and salt dragonflies gnats the quahog and cockle. Then imagine focusing in on each treasure closer and closer until you see a wing or an eye and then inside the organism. Once youre amongst the blood vessels with your magical microscope Goodwin will connect what you see to the human you through a hand a thigh a boot. What you discover will be big and beautiful and brutal. The first poem offers an invitation to the reader: come to the end of the wharf / when the last of the tide releases / the harbor with its trollers / and rigging / / / its lampshells / and speckled anemone _ _ come / after work when the mind / / has grown plumes. You will want to take Goodwin up on this invitation. I fell in love with these poems. -- Luanne Castle
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