Garden on an Alien Star System by Judith Cody

(3 customer reviews)

$14.99

 

Garden On An Alien Star System explores Nature and Gardens in today’s reckless world; a poem won Robert Frost Foundation Director’s Shortlist; another won Honorable Mention National League American Pen Women.

 

 

Category:

Description

Garden on an Alien Star System

by Judith Cody

$14.99, paper

978-1-64662-343-3

2020

Garden On An Alien Star System explores Nature and Gardens in today’s reckless world; a poem won Robert Frost Foundation Director’s Shortlist; another won Honorable Mention National League American Pen Women.

Judith Cody spent her early childhood in an orphanage where she learned to play piano and sing in the children’s’ choir. Her love of music evolved into her lifelong love of writing poetry. Judith’s poems won many national awards and honors that include the Atlantic Monthly, the Robert Frost Foundation’s Director’s Shortlist, and a poem now in the Smithsonian’s Institute’s permanent collection.

 

3 reviews for Garden on an Alien Star System by Judith Cody

  1. Andrew Sean Greer

    “A gimlet-eyed catalogue of the natural world, and, contained within it, the world within ourselves. Irresistible language makes it a classic.”

    Andrew Sean Greer author of the novel LESS, the 2018 Pulitzer Prize winner.

  2. Claire Ortalda

    “The prose poem, “Hose. Ants. Plants. Expressway.” alone makes this delightful chapbook worthy of our close consideration — and is emblematic, too, of this glorious, serious, humorous, loving paean to the natural world and us in it, in this, to quote another poem, “personal myth of the garden.”

    Claire Ortalda, Georgia State University Fiction Prize winner

  3. John Curl

    In Judith Cody’s gorgeous collection of poems, Garden on an Alien Star, a fistful of soil is a place of endless wonder, where the poet sings praises to decay, and a window box is a magical crossroads where the human and natural worlds interact. The gardener’s many relationships with her flowers and weeds are full of metaphors for personal and spiritual relationships. Everyday experiences take on mythical stature, in one poem it’s a line of ants along a garden hose, in another poem it’s “a descending cascade of petals” distracting a brown towhee from an earwig. The poems in this collection offer the poet’s vision of a backyard Eden where today’s creation legends continue to be forever born and reborn.

    John Curl, author of novels, “The Outlaws of Maroon”, “The Co-op Conspiracy” and the history, “Indigenous Peoples Day”

Add a review

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *