Turn Up the Ocean

Turn Up the Ocean
Tony Hoagland
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NZ$ 34.99
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NZ$ 27.99
Paperback
h234 x 156mm - 96pg
23 Jun 2022 UK
International import eta 10-19 days
9781780376318
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America' s Tony Hoagland (1953-2018) was known for provocative poems which interrogate human nature and contemporary culture with an intimate and wild urgency, located somewhere between outrage, stand-up comedy, and grief. The poems in his final collection Turn Up the Ocean examine with an unflinching eye and mordant humour the reality of living and dying in a time and culture that conspire to erase our inner lives. Hoagland' s signature wit and unparalleled observations take in long-standing injustices, the atrocities of American empire and consumerism, and our continuing habit of looking away. In these poems, perseverance depends on a gymnastics of scepticism and comedy, a dogged quest for authentic connection, and the consolations of the natural world. Turn Up the Ocean is a remarkable and moving collection, a fitting testament to Hoagland' s devotion to the capaciousness and art of poetry. Tony Hoagland' s poems poke and provoke at the same time as they entertain and delight. He was American poetry' s hilarious ' high priest of irony' , a wisecracker and a risk-taker whose disarming humour, self-scathing and tenderness are all fuelled by an aggressive moral intelligence. He pushed the poem not just to its limits but over the edge.
He belongs to that wagon-circle of American poets who believe in a "common reader". . . Hoagland is a poet of a ragged, half-satirical, half-lyrical intensity. If Billy Collins is Updike, Hoagland is Salinger, or perhaps Holden Caulfield. . . making us think we know the ground we are on, then showing us that we don' t. . . For me, he not only pulls the rug from under my feet when it comes to the moral complacencies and platitudes that I don' t notice I live by, he does the same with my given poetic certainties. -- Henry Shukman * Poetry London * Hilarious, searing poems that break your heart so fast you hardly notice you' re standing knee deep in a pool of implications. They are of this moment, right now - the present that we' re already homesick for. -- Marie Howe The writing is classic Hoagland: accessible and conversational, sometimes humorous, as he scrutinises everything from a book he' s reading to mortality and the emotions that arise when he thinks of the music of Leonard Cohen while sitting in a hospital waiting room. . . The work raises important questions ' about the hazards of playing at innocence' , why our culture can' t seem to make progress and why no one seems to recognise the impending environmental crisis. * The Washington Post *
Tony Hoagland (1953-2018) was born in Fort Bragg, North Carolina. His father was an Army doctor, and Hoagland grew up on various military bases throughout the South. He taught at the University of Houston and in the low residency MFA program at Warren Wilson College. He lived in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and was married to the writer Kathleen Lee. His first collection, Sweet Ruin (1992), won the Brittingham Prize in Poetry. His second, Donkey Gospel (1998), won the James Laughlin Award of The Academy of American Poets. The third, What Narcissism Means to Me (2003), was shortlisted for a National Book Circle Critics Award. His first UK book of poems, What Narcissism Means to Me: Selected Poems (Bloodaxe Books, 2005) drew upon these three collections, and was followed by Unincorporated Persons in the Late Honda Dynasty (2010) and Application for Release from the Dream, published by Graywolf Press in the US in 2015 and by Bloodaxe in Britain in 2016. The final two collections he published in his lifetime, written over the same period, were a small collection, Recent Changes in the Vernacular (Tres Chicas Press, 2017), and Priest Turned Therapist Treats Fear of God (Graywolf Press, 2018). The Bloodaxe UK edition of Priest Turned Therapist Treats Fear of God (2019) also includes some poems from Recent Changes in the Vernacular. His posthumously published final collection Turn Up the Ocean (Bloodaxe Books, UK; Graywolf Press, USA, 2022) was assembled by Kathleen Lee from the poems he was writing in the year before his death from cancer. He also published Real Sofistikashun: Essays on Poetry and Craft (Graywolf Press, USA, 2006) and Twenty Poems That Could Save America and Other Essays (Graywolf Press, USA, 2014). He was given a number of literary honours, including the Jackson Poetry Prize, awarded by Poets & Writers magazine; the Mark Twain Award, given by the Poetry Foundation; and the O. B. Hardison Jr. Prize from the Folger Shakespeare Library.

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