The Open Hand of Sky by Connie Wasem Scott

$19.99

 

The Open Hand of Sky offers readers a litany of brutal loss—of family members, of friends, of relationships, and of the sand-like ephemerality that is our living. There are several razor-like elegies, as well as desperate list poems of those impossible projects we are compelled to undertake: To Protect, To Bring Back, To Help. Simply, this book confronts what is like to live in a world where the sun is “like a toppled streetlight,” where the haunting bond with a lost brother is stronger than science; there are poems of slaughterhouses and hospices, the gut blow of losing our loved ones in a flash (“Death’s quick like that”) and the slow slipping away that takes on the quality of dream and memory (how “waves take . . . the beach / one handful / of sand at a time.”)  But let me be clear:  in this memorable collection, Wasem Scott also gives us celebratory poems—of shining stars, of the birth of a daughter, of the round glory of blueberries, of new lovers, even of cashews, and, of course, the daily giving that is the sun, a star “brighter than our lives.”

–Tod Marshall, author of Dare Say, The Tangled Line, and Bugle

 

The poems in The Open Hand of Sky bear unflinching witness to significant passages in the speaker’s life—loss of a loved brother to meningitis, the unraveling of a marriage, birth of a daughter and its subsequent waves of tenderness and fierce protectiveness, and the aging and loss of parents. Underlying all of this, however, is the poet’s exquisite attunement to the natural world, which renders her at once a perceptive witness and an animal-self easily fused with rock, tree, sun, and desert, inseparable from the elements in their sometimes-patient, sometimes-violent manifestations, and ever sustained by the force of her attention.

–Leslie Ullman, author of The You That All Along Has Housed You, Progress on the Subject of Immensity, and Slow Work Through Sand

 

I so admire the spirit in The Open Hand of Sky that clearly wants to – and does! – make beautiful poems, both in the midst of trouble and out of it. Teetering between the everyday and the metaphysical, Wasem Scott’s poems feel miraculously full, brimming with a fresh luminosity of the physical world. The poems seem pressured into being by all that’s fleeting, and reading them, we may find ourselves at that juncture of time and timelessness, where “Tomorrow / appears like a stranger / peeking through the drapes.”

–Nance Van Winckel, author of The Many Beds of Martha Washington, Our Foreigner, and Book of No Ledge

 

 

Description

The Open Hand of Sky

by Connie Wasem Scott

$19.99, Full-length, paper

978-1-64662-923-7

2022

The Open Hand of Sky examines personal bonds and what breaks them. Divided in three parts – fire, sand, trees – this intimate collection by Connie Wasem Scott examines a sibling bond and shared memories lost to an illness; a marriage that dries up like desert rain and the child that sprang from the turmoil; the speaker’s longing for connection that grows from loneliness and grief. Landscapes roll through this collection like a road trip through Colorado fields, North Dakota farmlands, the craggy hide of West Texas, to the towering trees of Washington. In each place, the speaker keeps an eye trained on the natural world – her source of comfort and stability, as though nature’s hand will hold her steady against the blowing gales of time and loss.

Connie Wasem Scott is a poet and educator living in Spokane, WA. She is the author of the chapbook Predictable as Fire (Moonstone Press, 2021), and her poems have appeared widely in journals and anthologies. She prefers to be outdoors, hiking and camping in in a forest or walking in city parks. For the past 20 years, she has served as an energetic and engaged English Instructor at Spokane Falls Community College.

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