Große Auswahl an günstigen Büchern
Schnelle Lieferung per Post und DHL

Bücher veröffentlicht von Cathexis Northwest Press

Filter
Filter
Ordnen nachSortieren Beliebt
  • von Karla Marrufo
    14,00 €

    Poetry collection by Karla Marrufo.Translated from the Spanish by Allison A. deFreese.Poet's bio: Karla Marrufo is author of eight books including novels, poetry collections, chapbooks, plays, and works of literary criticism. Her work has won prestigious awards including: Mexico's National Wilberto Cantón Award in Playwriting, the XVI José Díaz Bolio Poetry Prize, and the National Dolores Castro Prize for Women. She also received a fellowship from the Programa de Estímulo a la Creación y al Desarrollo Artístico en Yucatán (the PECDA, or Program for the Expansion and Development of Creativity and the Arts in the Yucatán), which resulted in the publication of her book Mérida lo invisible / Mérida the Invisible (Consejo Editorial de la Secretaría de la Cultura y las Artes de Yucatán). Her recent books of verse include La Dulzura de los naufragios / The Sweetness of Shipwrecks (2020) and Si Mérida tuviera puentes / If Mérida Had Bridges (2021).Translator's bio: Allison A. deFreese is a poet and literary translator whose books of verse include Nurdles and Other Poems (2022) and The Night with James Dean and Other Prose Poems (winner of Cathexis Northwest Press' 2022 chapbook competition). Her translations of Karla Marrufo's work also appear in Another Chicago Magazine, New England Review, SAND Journal Berlin's 10th Anniversary Issue, and other publications. She translated Marrufo's novel Flame Trees in May (Dalkey Archive Press and Deep Vellum Publishing, May, 2023).

  • von Patrick Wilcox
    16,00 €

    Poetry collection by Patrick Wilcox.Patrick Wilcox is from Independence, Missouri, a large suburb just outside Kansas City. He studied English and Creative writing at the University of Central Missouri where he also was an Assistant Editor for Pleiades and Editor-in-Chief of Arcade. He is a three-time recipient of the David Baker Award for Poetry, the 2020 honorable mention of Ninth Letter's Literary Award in Poetry, and grand-prize winner of The MacGuffin's Poet Hunt 26. His work has appeared in Maudlin House, Quarter After Eight, Bangalore, and West Trade Review, among others. He currently teaches English Language Arts at William Chrisman High School."Patrick Wilcox's poems are wonderfully strange. Strange, as in they estrange us from what we think we know of history, of society, of dreams, of love, so that we can truly see these forces and feelings clearly, perhaps for the first time. The poems in Acta are profound and funny, playful and wise. They revel in synesthetic surrealisms and fabulist narratives. They take us on walks through imaginative landscapes with exquisitely lyrical language, always circling back to deeper understandings of truth. Acta delights, inspires, moves, and amazes."-Kathryn Nuernberger, author of RUE¿¿"Patrick Wilcox's Acta may technically be a chapbook, but it has the emotional and intellectual heft of a full-length collection. With titles mostly taken from news headlines, these poems offer public moments as identifiable landmarks-and yet Wilcox is just as interested in the "unreal highways" our bodies "ink . . . onto real maps." His is a fatalistic world of death and ghosts and socio-historical failure-one in which we might be hanged even for our "hollow words" and we too often can't help but choose whatever disasters befall us. But it's also possible, here, for a beloved's fingertips to "sing / across the back of [the speaker's] neck," and if we keep looking hard enough at both history and the accumulating moments of our individual lives, it might be possible to "rename" what we see "until we name it right." This is a powerful and auspicious debut that deserves the fullest attention."-Wayne Miller, author of We the Jury

  • von Valyntina Grenier
    20,00 €

    Poetry Collection by Valyntina Grenier.Valyntina is a multi-genre eco artist living with her wife in Tucson, Arizona. She works with paint, ink, Neon, encaustic medium, recycled or repurposed materials and words. She is the author of three poetry chapbooks, the tête-bêche Fever Dream/ Take Heart (Cathexis Northwest Press 2020) and In Our Now (Finishing Line Press 2022). Find more of her work at valyntinagrenier.com or find her on Insta @valyntinagrenier.In Honeymoon Shoes, Valyntina Grenier writes "There is always already a war going on / all our dead / all our little deaths." These poems rage against capitalism and brutality, while insisting on tenderness. Following the zigzagging, musical logic of sound and play, they remind us "how lucky to live / to hear a donkey bray." This is a collection and a poet I won't forget. - Susan Nguyen, author of Dear Diaspora ¿¿Valyntina Grenier's Honeymoon Shoes exhibits our doubtfulness in living, in real-time: When catastrophe strikes, we wonder, "What is old, what new?" If the ugliness that surrounds us is not new, then how do we categorize the chaos we've witnessed since 2016? Grenier responds, "The world created us-" and "we make disasters." What can we do with this wildness but admit we are a part of it? How can a white woman speak about her white privilege without centering herself in the very act? She can't. But she can say that she can't, and she can make sure her canvas doesn't stay blank. In "City's Limit," Grenier zooms out to offer an urban overview, reflecting on city planning, urban gardeners working in memory of George Floyd, and the distinct motivations humans harbor to tame nature. Do we plant gardens to make something beautiful? To conquer it? Or, as in Minneapolis, to heal? The geometry of the black man-his cells, building to organs, pulsing blood through lungs-is "perfect," she writes. More perfect than the curated rose, which-can't we all see that rose as the destructive ideal of a so-called gentleman by now? I am wowed by the way the poet asks me to re-see the elements in light of human violence, to consider "the velvet crust the spade turns." - Sara Sams, author of Atom City

  • von Naomi Leimsider
    19,00 €

    Poetry Collection by Naomi Leimsider.Naomi Bess Leimsider has published poems, flash fiction, and short stories in The Avenue Journal, Booth, Anti-Heroin Chic, Wild Roof Journal, Planisphere Quarterly, Little Somethings Press, Syncopation Literary Journal, On the Seawall, St. Katherine Review, Exquisite Pandemic, Orca, Hamilton Stone Review, Rogue Agent Journal, Coffin Bell Journal, Hole in the Head Review, Newtown Literary, Otis Nebula, Quarterly West, The Adirondack Review, Summerset Review, Blood Lotus Journal, Pindeldyboz, 13 Warriors, Slow Trains, Zone 3, Drunkenboat, and The Brooklyn Review.She has been a finalist for the Acacia Fiction Prize, the Saguaro Poetry Prize, and the Tiny Fork Chapbook Contest. In addition, she received a Pushcart Prize nomination in 2022.She teaches creative and expository writing at Hunter College/CUNY

  • von Peter Sagnella
    19,00 €

    Coming To Terms.Poetry by Peter Sagnella. Peter Sagnella lives with his wife and sons in North Haven, Connecticut, where he has taught Composition, Poetry, and Environmental Literature for twenty-two years. A Pushcart nominee and Edwin Way Teale Writer-in-Residence, his work has been exhibited at the Yale School of Forestry and appeared in many journals, most recently Wild Roof, Cagibi, New Limestone Review, and Sho.

  • von Louis Efron
    19,00 €

    Poetry by Louis Efron.A beautiful creation of song and scar, of emotional complexity and simple witness, Louis Efron's debut collection The Unempty Spaces Between mingles the natural and human worlds in a series of accessible, personal, universal poems. From lush to bare, the landscapes he presents us with are so intertwined with and impacted by our actions that we realize the two have always been one. Brimming with meditations deep as winter snow and boundless compassion and curiosity, these vibrant poems remain grounded in a universal familiarity that opens us up to something greater. John Sibley Williamsauthor of As One Fire Consumes Another Louis Efron's collection The Unempty Spaces Between reveals a reverence for nature and personal connection that reminds us of Mary Oliver's gorgeous nature poems. He uses language beautifully to tell us that tides "scar the sand," "petals color the earth/a sweet jazz composition," and "death can be a beautiful thing . . . unleashing the pent-up coil spring." These poems are a deep meditation on emptiness and the searching soul. Karol Nielsenauthor of Small LifeThe Unempty Spaces Between by Louis Efron is a refreshing work of poetry. Refreshing is the respect given to the craft of poetry. In the poetic world, where prose poetry dominates the landscape, it's refreshing to read poems marked by form and end-rhymes; notwithstanding, the journey the reader will take processing the metaphoric. Evidence of form, rhyme, and the metaphoric are signified in the poems Lost, A Candle with Two Wicks, and Spaces Between, to name a few. This work of poetry is worthy of a good read and the time of those who enjoy serious writing. Emmett Wheatfallauthor of Our Scarlet Blue WoundsHaunting, harrowing and frighteningly incisive, Louis Efron's dark narrative poems incite terror, provoke gut wrenching memories and invite personal reflection. A nightmarish adventure-what could be better? The Unempty Spaces Between is one of my favorite afternoon reads in a decade. In his own words, "a poetic inferno," but to my mind it's "a welcome assault on the senses."Jim Volz, Ph.D.Editor, Shakespeare Theatre Association's Quarto

  • von Ellen White Rook
    19,00 €

    Ellen White Rook is a poet and contemplative arts teacher who divides her time between upstate New York and Maine. Retired from a career as an information technology manager, she now offers writing workshops and leads retreats that combine meditation, movement, and writing. She also teaches Japanese flower arranging in the Sogetsu tradition. Ellen holds a Master of Fine Arts degree from Lindenwood University and has been twice nominated for the Pushcart Prize. Suspended is her first collection of poetry. She is married and has three adult daughters. To read more of her work, visit her website at ellenwhiterook.com.The poems in Suspended surprise and stretch the imagination, delve into edges and margins, mystery. In these in-between places Ellen White Rook seeks clarity that aligns with essential elements of being. Loss and hope intermingle - "the oracle leaves / footprints in water that turn to ice." Sadness is mitigated by creating: "we cannot help but make another story even in the infinity of absence." Humor is part of this whole. The poet wakes hearing an "unruly bird" in the night, only to discover the noise is - I'll let you find that out for yourself.- Katrinka Moore, author of Diminuendo¿¿¿¿¿¿¿Join White Rook's "finite but expanding" journey-what she calls "the edge of me"-where she "thinks about the unstoppable." Discover "the sound of light/enveloping/the moon" in a thrush.Listen with her to "the chirrup of the spheres" in the night. Witness "fires, big as nations." Suspended explores "memories of what we ignored," ancient and personal.White Rook's collection positions us in that liminal space in which we each find ourselves-in that transitional moment of the present, conscious of our forebears, speculating about the future.-Dawn Marar, Author of Efflorescence¿¿¿¿¿In Ellen White Rook's collection Suspended...words spoken hang/in myths/knife-silver light sits on murky water/not a reflection but the place/ between object and impression/at the edge...The poems begin with the death of a father and end with the birth of a grandchild, and in between, ask and elaborate in elegantly crafted language and startling imagery the central questions of being: What is it to be "awake?" How can we find what pulses under thought, the liminal spaces where new truths and new vision can be perceived? How can we see brokenness and death as a portal to a new state of being? How do we live life with the knowledge of death to come? In "Use Caution," the speaker asks, Is there a seed I might nurture/in my hard self/the way bones cultivate/marrow? And the poems shift from the body as landscape to landscape as the body, as the poet looks for what might last while also perceiving disruptions and brokenness as windows to beauty and new being.-Susan E. Oringel, author of My Coney Island

  • von Chim Sher Ting
    19,00 €

    Poetry by Chim Sher Ting.Originally from a sunny tropical island in Southeast Asia, Sher Ting is a Singaporean-Chinese currently residing in Australia. She is a 2021 Pushcart and Best of The Net nominee, in addition to being a 2021 Writeability Fellow with Writers Victoria and a finalist in The New York Times Asia-Pacific Writing Competition. She has work published in OSU The Journal, Pleiades, The Pinch, Rust and Moth and elsewhere. Her work speaks of themes of dislocation/dissociation, loneliness/loss and memory/nostalgia. She hopes, through her work, to highlight oft-rejected narratives of minority identity, in addition to exploring the plurality of the body and identity. She can be found at sherting.carrd.coWhat does it mean to be Chinese when your version of culture is different from your grandparents'?What does it mean to be Chinese in an anglo-centric society?BODIES OF SEPARATION is an exploration of identity and relationships with one's home country through the lens of language, incorporating themes of loneliness/loss and memory/nostalgia while confronting larger issues of race, culture and heritage. It seeks to erase the borders between English and Chinese poetry, that the words may find their measure of home in the nexus of two identities.'Our names were all expanse/ 2718 miles and the length of an umbilical cord,' reads the opening poem of Sher Ting's astounding collection BODIES OF SEPARATION. It is merely the first instance of candor and beauty in a book rife with such lightning-bright revelations. These poems are a tender missive to all the liminal places a body in migration passes through to meet itself: in yearning, in languages lost or retrieved, in spaces that hold us conditionally. There is an undeniable, oceanic pull to these poems, and Sher Ting is a writer I trust to sweep me out into wild currents where anything is possible- and back again to safety. - Jihyun Yun, Author of Some Are Always HungryAn assured debut that feels more like a full-length collection than a chapbook in its impressive amplitude and depth, a mature, meditative voice with a beautiful tone and lyrical pitch that give these explorations of diasporic themes a compelling freshness of insight and imagination. Especially exquisite are the graceful cadences that enable each poem to find its measure and home between the borders of two languages. - Boey Kim Cheng, Author of Between Stations: Essays and The Singer and Other PoemsIn this vibrant, valiant collection, Sher Ting excavates the complexities of coming from multiple countries, dual languages, and diverse influences... Often writing on dislocation and the isolation created by brute forces, Sher Ting bravely denounces the interrelated structures and cruelties of racism and bigotry. Painting with a masterfully defiant brush, Sher Ting cleverly brings us into her world of clashing realities, identities, and idols and asks: "Why does our existence/ have to be a fight?" Sher Ting is an electrifying, singular voice in poetry; a rising star. Go read this book! - Jose Hernandez Diaz, Author of The Fire Eater & Bad Mexican, Bad American

  • von Henry Stanton
    36,00 €

    Henry Stanton''s fiction, poetry and paintings appear in 2River, The A3 Review, Alien Buddha Press, Avatar, The Baltimore City Paper, The Baltimore Sun Magazine, Black Petal Press, Chicago Record, Down in The Dirt, High Shelf Press, Holy & Intoxicated Press, Kestrel, North of Oxford, Outlaw Poetry, Paper & Ink Zine, The Paragon Press, PCC Inscape, Pindeldyboz, Ramingo!, Rust Belt Press, Rusty Truck, Salt & Syntax, SmokeLong Quarterly, Under The Bleachers, The William and Mary Review, Word Riot, The Write Launch and Yellow Mama, among other publications. His book of Short Stories, "River of Sleep and Dreams" is due to be published by Alien Buddha Press in 2019. His book of poems "The Man Who Turned Stuff Off" is being published by Holy & Intoxicated Press in June 2019His poetry was selected for the A3 Review Poetry Prize and was shortlisted for the Eyewear 9th Fortnight Prize for Poetry. His fiction received an Honorable Mention acceptance for the Salt & Syntax Fiction Contest and was selected as a finalist for the Pen 2 Paper Annual Writing Contest.A selection of Henry Stanton''s paintings can be viewed at the following website www.brightportfal.com A selection of Henry Stanton''s published fiction and poetry can be located for reading in the library at www.brightportfal.com .All shows have been temporarily suspended due to the Covid-19 pandemic.Henry Stanton is Publisher of Uncollected Press and the Founding & Managing Editor of The Raw Art Review - www.therawartreview.com

  • von Allison A. Defreese
    17,00 €

  • von Julie Benesh
    19,00 €

  • von Miloh Gorgevska
    19,00 €

  • von Josh Feit
    19,00 €

  • von Robert Eugene Rubino
    19,00 €

  • von High Shelf Press
    30,00 €

  • von Nadine Klassen
    16,00 €

  • - March 2021
    von High Shelf Press
    32,00 €

    High Shelf is a monthly collection of poetry, art, photography, and satire from around the world, collected and curated in Portland, Oregon. High Shelf XXVIII (March 2021) contains 90+ pages of world-class poetry, art, photography, and satire. High Shelf XXVIII showcases 22 Artists/Authors from Carnation, WATucson, AZDenver, CONoblesville, INWindham, MEBoston, MASomerville, MANorth Branford, CTKerhonkson, NYNew York, NYBrooklyn, NYHampton, NJBethesda, MDWestminster, MDGretna, LAStillwater Lake, Nova Scotia, CanadaSarnia, CanadaCoquitlam, CanadaLondon, United KingdomGuérard, France

  • - February 2021
    von High Shelf Press
    29,00 €

  • von Temple Cone
    18,00 €

  • - January 2021
    von High Shelf Press
    32,00 €

  • - December 2020
    von High Shelf Press
    30,00 €

    High Shelf is a monthly collection of poetry, art, photography, and satire from around the world, collected and curated in Portland, Oregon. High Shelf XXV (December 2020) contains 70+ pages of world-class poetry, art, photography, and satire. High Shelf XXV showcases 21 Artists/Authors fromPortland, ORHood River, ORSeattle, WAGolden, COMadison, WISouth Bend, INCleveland, OHEasthampton, MADanville, NHBrooklyn, NYNew York, NYCharleston, SCAugusta, GADouglasville, GATucker, GANew Orleans, LABootle, EnglandAshford, IrelandHong Kong, ChinaYawatahama, Japan

  • von Clif Mason
    15,00 €

    This book-length poem is a magical realist journey, catalyzed by war and grief. The speaker walks, impelled toward the restorative idea of the stark earthly beauty and purity represented by Antarctica, and toward the love that he knows will be awaiting him. That love, and the creative and magical power it embodies, is both encouraging and sustaining. Of course, the journey takes the protagonist deep into both beauty and evil. The journey is born of desperation, but it is carried out through acts of will and grit and openness to experience, as well as a desire to actively re-envision and recreate reality. Poetry for fans of Gabriel García Márquez, Isabelle Allende, Laura Esquivel, and Pablo Neruda. "To read Clif Mason's lines is to stagger through the shimmering ruins of a darkening apocalypse, where the only salvation is the troubled beauty of the journey, and to find, somehow, that beauty is enough.  'We have this brief time,' his lines remind us.  'Walk with me,' they say.  And we do." — Joseph Fasano author of The Dark Heart of Every Wild Thing “Do you want a journey AND a love story? This poem delivers both, plus an invitation (and a template) to “. . . take this leaden hour and make it gold.”                                                                                                                                       — Marjorie Saiser, author of The Woman in the Moon "The Book of Night & Waking is an expansive, expressive, heartfelt act of witness. From ghosted, forever out-of-reach American ideals through poignant personal landscapes, this compact and explosive chapbook, composed with a burning passion and infinite compassion, transcends contemporary politics to surprise, enlighten, and terrify us with its elegiac experimentations that, were he writing today, Whitman would be proud of. These are songs that “wreathe us like smoke”. These are songs that truly “play through me, / through you, / through endless night & waking.” — John Sibley Williams, author of As One Fire Consumes Another & Skin Memory     

  • von Valyntina Grenier
    19,00 €

    Valyntina Grenier’s FEVER DREAM / TAKE HEART marks a poetic “double debut” with a tête-bêche chapbook, two titles bound upside-down with two front covers, which can be read from either side.  The poems shape their sense from sound, but do not hesitate to critique/navigate/decipher reality with a feminist protest. Associative and dreamy, the poems also prove to be starkly political.  They explore how we are miraculously alive in the midst of degrading political and weather systems. Some of the poems derive their initial lexicon from source texts, but they all confront the tenderness and violence that mark our human natures.  With subtle humor, word play, and linguistic inventions, Grenier has written a surprising tour de force whose discrete short books, taken together, range from the sexual and sinister to the prayerful and divine. Valyntina Grenier is a poet and visual artist living in Tucson, Arizona. She was born in Lancaster, California, and educated at The University of California, Berkeley, and St. Mary’s College, Moraga. Graduating with an MFA in poetry, she is self-taught as a painter, installation and Neon artist. In both language and visual art, she pushes the boundaries of representation and abstraction to create a vantage from which to view violence and prejudice. An LGBTQIA artist and activist, her work has appeared in Lana Turner, JuxtaProse, Cathexis Northwest Press and Bat City Review.

  • - July 2019
     
    21,00 €

    A Monthly Collection of Art, Photography, Poetry, and Satire. High Shelf Issue VIII (July 2019).66 pages of poetry, art, photography, and satire. Works collected from artists and writers from across America and beyond.

  • - A Testament to the Shared Uniqueness of the Poetic Experience.
     
    13,00 €

  • von Robert T Krantz
    15,00 €

Willkommen bei den Tales Buchfreunden und -freundinnen

Jetzt zum Newsletter anmelden und tolle Angebote und Anregungen für Ihre nächste Lektüre erhalten.