Thunderstorm by Heather Bryant

$19.99

 

“There is in these poems the sentiment of a romantic, one who keeps a sixpence given by her father, “a pregnancy stick that turned blue,” the hospital tags worn when her twins were born and a daughter’s Mother’s Day gifts. Indeed motherhood looms large in these poems–the love received from one’s own and the love bestowed to one’s children. So many of these poems return to that theme, “March Snow, Pine Boughs” is one of the most poignant, as is “Feeding America” in which the speaker is haunted by her mother’s final (and never answered) phone message left on her answering machine– “she had something important to tell me.” The speaker in these poems sees her own growth from toddler to wife and mother and beyond on to “Wanderer.” Thunderstorm calls up the suddenness with which life can change; there is the awakening, “the unexplained gap,” the need to “stem the damage,” the allusion to an abusive relationship and infidelity, the death of parents. There is loss and the recovery from loss–both seen through the lens of nature and in the metaphor of place. The path to self-reliance and recovery is in the mountains and in wildflowers galore, flourishing–Queen Anne’s Lace, lavender, goldenrod, yellow tulips, flaming azaleas, lilacs–and it’s in the trees: greening willows, Vermont Maples, English chestnut.

–Mary Bonina, author of Clear Eye Tea and the memoir, My Father’s Eyes

 

Thunderstorm, Heather Bryant‘s fifth volume and second full-length collection, completes the trajectory of her previous volume, My Wedding Dress, with rich ruminations on personal relationships under the pressure of time. In this sequence of poems, the designer of the wedding dress reveals herself to be a Calypso in an analogical odyssey of self-discovery. Seasons, anniversaries, and holidays provoke memories of parents, marriage, and children and transport the speaker into complex lost worlds. Even when such journeys seem futile, as in ‘The Road to Nowhere, Swain County, ‘ or painful, as in ‘Camera Oscura, ‘ the memories remain poignant and useful. Even a journey ‘Somewhere on a Dark Road in the Middle of Nowhere’ brings stirrings of renewal and hopes for reaching home. Bryant’s distinguished collection ranges far in its quest for meaning but remains rooted in nature, family, and lived experience, rounding back to Pennsylvania in its final and title poem, “Thunderstorm,” which faces old fears and rediscovers ‘sweetness and irony’ even in a universe of unfriendly gods.”

–Paul Fisher, Associate Professor of American Studies, Wellesley College, and author of House of Wits: An Intimate Portrait of the James Family

 

 

 

 

Description

Thunderstorm

by Heather Bryant

$19.99, full-length, paper

978-1-63534-260-4

2017

Heather Corbally Bryant (formerly Heather Bryant Jordan) teaches in the Writing Program at Wellesley College. Previously, she taught at the Pennsylvania State University, the University of Michigan, and Harvard College where she won awards for her teaching. She received her A.B. with honors in History and Literature from Harvard where she received the Boston Ruskin Prize for her thesis, “Sight and Sensibility: A Study of Praeterita.” She received her PhD in Modern British and Irish Literature from the University of Michigan where she was a Regents Fellow. Her academic publications include, How Will the Heart Endure: Elizabeth Bowen and the Landscape of War” (University of Michigan Press, 1992). This study of the relationship between war and literature was awarded the Donald Murphy Prize for best first book. In addition, she has assisted in the research for the Cornell Yeats Series as well as publishing articles on Bowen, Yeats, O’Faolain, and T.S. Eliot. She has given papers at international conferences and was a plenary speaker at the centennial celebration of Elizabeth Bowen held at University College, Cork. Beyond her academic publications, Heather Corbally Bryant has published a novel, Through Your Hands (2011) which received an Editor’s Choice and Rising Star designation. The Finishing Line Press published her first poetry chapbook, Cheap Grace, in 2011. In addition, she has published poems in The Christian Science Monitor and the 2007 anthology of poetry, In Other Words. The Parallel Press Poetry Series of the University of Wisconsin Libraries published Lottery Ticket, her second chapbook in 2013. She has given readings at The Pennsylvania State University, The University of Wisconsin at Madison, The University of Illinois at Chicago, Southern Florida University in Ft. Lauderdale, Folio Bookstore, San Francisco the Palmer Art Museum in State College, the Transatlantic Connections Conference in Donegal, Ireland, Wellesley College, Notre Dame, Georgia State, and Harvard College, among other venues. Compass Rose, her third poetry collection, from The Finishing Line Press appeared in March 2016. Her first full-length collection of poetry, My Wedding Dress, was published by Finishing Line Press in the fall of 2016. Eve’s Lament, her sixth poetry collection, is forthcoming from the Finishing Line Press in 2018. Her latest novel, You Can’t Wrap Fire in Paper, will be published by the Ardent Writer Press in January of 2018.

 

 

 

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