People I Can't or Won't Have Another Conversation With

Fiction & Literature, Poetry
Cover of the book People I Can't or Won't Have Another Conversation With by Alexander Thorne, Alexander Thorne
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Alexander Thorne ISBN: 9781311857705
Publisher: Alexander Thorne Publication: July 20, 2015
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Alexander Thorne
ISBN: 9781311857705
Publisher: Alexander Thorne
Publication: July 20, 2015
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

The People in the title of Alexander Thorne's new book are both living and dead, but this also refers to the fact that we all carry fragments of the living and dead within ourselves. "In the center, transcendent, are old ghosts," so begins People I Can't or Won't Have Another Conversation With. "They look at me from across the room./ They're like stars—when you look at them/they are hard to see but when they enter/your peripheral vision—there they are."

Thorne's poems explore the bridges between the physical world where we live and the collective unconscious where we dream (and where we keep both our dead and the collected fragments of our past), blending reality with the surreal. As Fyodor Dostoyevsky once wrote, "Nothing helps a man to reform like thinking of the past with regret." Poems such as these confirm David Bain's observation of Thorne's poetry that "...his work is more sharp, insightful and intriguing than anything I was writing at the same age."

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The People in the title of Alexander Thorne's new book are both living and dead, but this also refers to the fact that we all carry fragments of the living and dead within ourselves. "In the center, transcendent, are old ghosts," so begins People I Can't or Won't Have Another Conversation With. "They look at me from across the room./ They're like stars—when you look at them/they are hard to see but when they enter/your peripheral vision—there they are."

Thorne's poems explore the bridges between the physical world where we live and the collective unconscious where we dream (and where we keep both our dead and the collected fragments of our past), blending reality with the surreal. As Fyodor Dostoyevsky once wrote, "Nothing helps a man to reform like thinking of the past with regret." Poems such as these confirm David Bain's observation of Thorne's poetry that "...his work is more sharp, insightful and intriguing than anything I was writing at the same age."

More books from Poetry

Cover of the book Midnight Cowboy Rides... by Alexander Thorne
Cover of the book Desperate Poems by Alexander Thorne
Cover of the book Barricate e poesia by Alexander Thorne
Cover of the book God's Foolishness by Alexander Thorne
Cover of the book Messages from Heaven by Alexander Thorne
Cover of the book Poemas by Alexander Thorne
Cover of the book Shades of Gray by Alexander Thorne
Cover of the book Hope the Hermit by Alexander Thorne
Cover of the book Стихи о Прекрасной Даме by Alexander Thorne
Cover of the book The Profane: Poems by Alexander Thorne
Cover of the book Poetry for Laughing out Loud by Alexander Thorne
Cover of the book Shakespeare and His Contemporaries by Alexander Thorne
Cover of the book Loving My Lord Through Poetry by Alexander Thorne
Cover of the book PaleoRik by Alexander Thorne
Cover of the book The Poetry of Social Work by Alexander Thorne
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy