The Deadly Shadow of the Wall: Poems by R. W. Haynes

$19.99

 

 

The Laredo of R. W. Haynes’ poetry is a troubled ground, simultaneously at the border of Texas and Mexico and the divide between the mythic and mundane, godly and profane. Sometimes the frustration with mindlessness and delusion rises like a horrible fever. But just in time music, humor, and a dog who knows better arrive to enliven the lonely byways. In those moments, when wandering academics disturb the dust of dead cowboys and avaricious Spaniards, a spirit awakens even in the ludicrous. Best of all, in this collection Haynes playfully wrestles with the discipline of the sonnet and formal verse, both paying homage to tradition and infusing it with a colloquial voice uniquely his own.

 

–Gerald C. Wood is the author of Horton Foote and the Theater of Intimacy, casebooks on Foote and Neil LaBute, and Conor McPherson: Imagining Mischief. He also wrote Smoky Joe Wood: The Biography of a Baseball Legend. Wood is Emeritus Professor of English at Carson-Newman University.

 

 

Description

The Deadly Shadow of the Wall: Poems

by R. W. Haynes

$19.99, Full-length, paper

979-8-88838-029-1

2022

Courageous investigators are invited to seek within this volume for clues to the following:

  • Is the sonnet still alive? Is “formal” verse dead?  Would Emily Dickinson whip Amado Nervo in a fair fight?
  • Do the Muses of the South Georgia flatwoods sing well on the Río Bravo? What did Dr. King say to General Lee when they got to Heaven?  Did Ezra Pound’s improvements of W. B. Yeats’s verse count as sabotage?  Did Joseph Conrad really hate Russians?
  • Which makes a better omelet, luffas or yard-long beans? When actors play actors, should members of the audience play actors, too?  Did Chaucer know algebra?  Did Henry VIII poison Katherine of Aragon and Cardinal Wolsey? Could Thomas J. Jackson have captured Washington in 1861?  Who made it possible for Louisa Picquet to purchase her mother from Horton Foote’s great-great grandpa?
  • Why did Sam Houston give up poetry? Whatever happened to Ibsen’s Bible? Whatever happened to the Colossus of Rhodes?  El Cerro de San Juan? The bones of El Rey Nayar?
  • Did Sir John Falstaff father several illegitimate children in Texas? Did the water of the Colorado River really test positive for a natural hallucinogen?  Does Matagorda Island attract hurricanes? What did Henrik Ibsen have against ducks?

R. W. Haynes, Professor of English at Texas A&M International University, has published poetry in many journals in the United States and in other countries.  As a scholar, he specializes in British Renaissance literature, and he has also taught extensively in such areas as medieval thought, Southern literature, classical poetry, and writing.  Since 1992, he has offered regular graduate and undergraduate courses in Shakespeare, as well as seminars in Ibsen, Chaucer, Spenser, rhetoric, and other topics.  In 2004, Haynes met Texas playwright/screenwriter Horton Foote and has since become a leading scholar of that author’s remarkable oeuvre, publishing a book on Foote’s plays in 2010 and editing a collection of essays on his works in 2016.  Haynes also writes plays and fiction. In 2016, he received the SCMLA Poetry Award ($500) at the South Central Modern Language Association Conference. Three collections of his poetry have been published, Laredo Light (Cyberwit 2019), Let the Whales Escape (Finishing Line Press 2019), and Heidegger Looks at the Moon (Finishing Line Press 2021).

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “The Deadly Shadow of the Wall: Poems by R. W. Haynes”

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