Rowing Inland

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science, Sociology, Urban, Fiction & Literature, Poetry, American
Cover of the book Rowing Inland by Jim Daniels, Wayne State University Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Jim Daniels ISBN: 9780814342190
Publisher: Wayne State University Press Publication: February 6, 2017
Imprint: Wayne State University Press Language: English
Author: Jim Daniels
ISBN: 9780814342190
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Publication: February 6, 2017
Imprint: Wayne State University Press
Language: English

Rowing Inland, Jim Daniels’s fifteenth book of poetry is a time machine that takes the reader back to the Metro Detroit of his youth and then accelerates toward the future. With humor and empathy, the author looks at his own family’s challenges and those of the surrounding community where the legacy handed down from generation to generation is one of survival. The economic hits that this community has to endure create both an uncertainty about its future and a determined tenacity. Divided into four sections, Rowing Inland calls out key moments from the author’s life. The events that inspire many of these poems took place a long time ago and often it has taken the poet his entire life to write about those experiences and write about them with the necessary emotional distance. For example, some of the poems in the section “Late Invocation for Magic” reference the first girl he ever kissed and her accidental death by fire. In the last section of the book, Daniels approaches the current political and social standings in Detroit with lines like, “The distance to Baghdad or Kandahar / is measured in rowboat coffins / while here in the fatty palm of The Mitten / minor skirmishes electrify tedium.” Although it focuses on Detroit’s metropolitan area, the book can be considered a snapshot of working-class life anywhere across the country. Daniels casts his lens on a way of life that is often distorted or ignored by the powers that be. He zooms in on street level where all the houses may look alike but each holds its own secrets and dreams. To paraphrase novelist and screenwriter Richard Price, Detroit is the “zip code for [Daniels’s] heart”—a place that his writing will always come back to. Readers of contemporary poetry with a regional persuasion will enjoy this collection.

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

Rowing Inland, Jim Daniels’s fifteenth book of poetry is a time machine that takes the reader back to the Metro Detroit of his youth and then accelerates toward the future. With humor and empathy, the author looks at his own family’s challenges and those of the surrounding community where the legacy handed down from generation to generation is one of survival. The economic hits that this community has to endure create both an uncertainty about its future and a determined tenacity. Divided into four sections, Rowing Inland calls out key moments from the author’s life. The events that inspire many of these poems took place a long time ago and often it has taken the poet his entire life to write about those experiences and write about them with the necessary emotional distance. For example, some of the poems in the section “Late Invocation for Magic” reference the first girl he ever kissed and her accidental death by fire. In the last section of the book, Daniels approaches the current political and social standings in Detroit with lines like, “The distance to Baghdad or Kandahar / is measured in rowboat coffins / while here in the fatty palm of The Mitten / minor skirmishes electrify tedium.” Although it focuses on Detroit’s metropolitan area, the book can be considered a snapshot of working-class life anywhere across the country. Daniels casts his lens on a way of life that is often distorted or ignored by the powers that be. He zooms in on street level where all the houses may look alike but each holds its own secrets and dreams. To paraphrase novelist and screenwriter Richard Price, Detroit is the “zip code for [Daniels’s] heart”—a place that his writing will always come back to. Readers of contemporary poetry with a regional persuasion will enjoy this collection.

More books from Wayne State University Press

Cover of the book The Apu Trilogy by Jim Daniels
Cover of the book Women's Hebrew Poetry on American Shores by Jim Daniels
Cover of the book Ashes & Stars by Jim Daniels
Cover of the book Practicing to Walk Like a Heron by Jim Daniels
Cover of the book Zones of Anxiety: Movement, Musidora, and the Crime Serials of Louis Feuillade by Jim Daniels
Cover of the book Dreaming Suburbia by Jim Daniels
Cover of the book As If We Were Prey by Jim Daniels
Cover of the book Under Michigan by Jim Daniels
Cover of the book Fairy Tale Review by Jim Daniels
Cover of the book When You Come Home by Jim Daniels
Cover of the book I Want to Be Once by Jim Daniels
Cover of the book The New Diaspora by Jim Daniels
Cover of the book Survival and Regeneration by Jim Daniels
Cover of the book No Haven for the Oppressed by Jim Daniels
Cover of the book The Women Were Leaving the Men by Jim Daniels
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