Midnight in the Guest Room
|
| List Price: | CDN$ 18.00 |
| Price: | CDN$ 13.14 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $39. Details |
Availability: Temporarily out of stock. Order now and we'll deliver when available. We'll e-mail you with an estimated delivery date as soon as we have more information. Your credit card will not be charged until we ship the item.
Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca
8 new or used available from CDN$ 3.78
Average customer review:Product Description
In Midnight in the Guest Room Jan Bailey locates the "bliss of the routine" experiences in women’s lives—childhood, love, marriage, sexuality, birth, child rearing, aging—and transforms them into moments of transcendent power and beauty. With uncommon wit and sensitivity she offers us poems about the pleasures of a woman’s soft and unstylish belly; the fierceness of mother love; the desolation of a miscarriage; the hilarious illusion of sexual healing; the unexpected eroticism of breast feeding:
from "Mornings in the Blue House":
She draped her newborn like a sheaf of peonies
across her lap, peeled back the blanket from
the puffball face, then parted her robe, pinched
her nipple and settled in her daughter there
and something sweetly sexual rose between
them—the pressure, the release—and she fell
fully into love, holding nothing back
as with a man, whose wounding begins
as soon as he cries Baby and rolls over.
Rooted in the landscape of the South, celebrating the private treasures to be found in the everyday world, her poems speak to us all of the joys and the losses of the seasons of our lives.
Jan Bailey grew up in the foothills of South Carolina. The author of two highly regarded volumes of poetry, Paper Clothes and Heart of the Other, she is a recipient of the South Carolina Arts Commission Fellowship in Poetry. She holds an MFA from Vermont College and -divides her time between South Carolina, where she is chair of the creative writing department of the Governor’s School for the Arts and Humanities, and Monhegan Island, Maine, where she teaches poetry workshops and operates the island general store.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1248981 in Books
- Published on: 2004-03-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 92 pages
Customer Reviews
For women, mostly
I read a review for A Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood that called it a "woman's novel", and I bristled instinctively at the use of gender labeling on a work of art. But on reading Atwood's work, I had to admit that it was an accurate assessment. Her imagery sank deeply into that illusive yet definitive part of me that is woman, not man. Jan's poetry affected me in much the same way. There were times when that assessment narrowed even more to that instinctual yet learned essence that is mother. As I read, I felt the tell-tale closing tension of my throat, followed by the creeping heat of societal shame at mid-day tears on a cleaning afternoon. Four words and an image so strong, so clear, so real, that she took me years away from my chair. Jan's poetry needs to be appreciated as much for their line-by-line beauty as for their totality; and while even a man may see the beauty, a woman will feel it. A mother will relive it.
