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Gregg Orifici's Rattle of the Sun is a meditation on the personal and the monumental. His poems are carefully crafted portraits of longing, discovery, and rambunctious joy, giving voice to misunderstood weeds, the irrepressible elderly, a boy coming to terms with his difference, and the plight of the gardener who, to create beauty, must play God in the garden. Rattle of the Sun marks out the arc of a life whose worldly range is astonishingly wide-everything from the Camino de Santiago and the fall of the Berlin Wall to Farah Fawcett, a Sicilian palazzo and hilltown Vermont. But Orifici's…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Gregg Orifici's Rattle of the Sun is a meditation on the personal and the monumental. His poems are carefully crafted portraits of longing, discovery, and rambunctious joy, giving voice to misunderstood weeds, the irrepressible elderly, a boy coming to terms with his difference, and the plight of the gardener who, to create beauty, must play God in the garden. Rattle of the Sun marks out the arc of a life whose worldly range is astonishingly wide-everything from the Camino de Santiago and the fall of the Berlin Wall to Farah Fawcett, a Sicilian palazzo and hilltown Vermont. But Orifici's spiritual journey is what's really at stake here, the stops along that road rendered in intense, abundant detail. Sweet, cosmopolitan, satiric, wise, wry, soulful, self-doubting, impetuous, annoyed, curious, and more: this book has it all! -David Rivard, author of Standoff, winner of the PEN/New England Prize in poetry In Rattle of the Sun, Gregg Orifici explores his boyhood and the emotional undertow of pop culture, his home life in New England, his Sicilian roots and other geographies, as well as the homesteading of technological progress and the verdant soul. Plainspoken and expansive, vibrant and chromatic, these poems are born of an impeccable ear and precise pitch; they embody a staggering range of personal experience and historical awareness, trajectories of remembered and present lives. Acute perceptions of ceaseless becoming, of the personhood, teachings, and gifts of plants within the complexity of their and our quantum lives, set all the senses to singing of discovery and loss. They convey what it is to exist on the physical and spiritual edge: "Our own brittle cacophony / we call love." ~ William O'Daly, author of The New Gods and translator of Pablo Neruda's Book of Twilight
Autorenporträt
Gregg Orifici is a poet, memoirist, international educator and garden/ landscape designer. His narrative and lyrical portraits of plants and people and place weave together documentary realism, social commentary, satire, and the quiet mystery of the everyday. His experiments with voice, structure and musicality commingle the intimate with the universal. He has gardened in residence at The Great Dixter in England, Villa San Giuliano in Sicily, and Jardín Botánico de Vallarta in Mexico, inspiring his creativity, both on the page and in the New England gardens he designs. Orifici holds a JD from Vanderbilt University and an MFA in Creative Writing from University of New Hampshire. He lives with his artist partner and four Jack Russells on a hilltop garden-in-progress in southern Vermont.