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Book Title

This Poor Book

Subtitle
A Poem
Author 1
Fanny Howe
Poem Excerpt
“Granny, why don’t we leave?”
 
Look down onto the street
at the children
with their heads shaved
and their skin too white.
 
Do you want to leave
this house and join the war,
my dark-eyed child?
 
“No, grandmother.”
 
Let’s pull down the shade then.
Open this poor book and read.
 
—from This Poor Book
Body

For decades, Fanny Howe has been our great poet of spirit and conscience, dislocation and bewilderment. In This Poor Book, completed just before her death, she has gathered a selection of poems and excerpts from the last thirty years, including new and revised poems, and has arranged them into an astonishing singular poem. Across this brilliant reconfiguration of her work, we follow the poet as seeker, both faithful and foolish, searching for language and existence beyond the machines of economy, judgment, and war. Howe interrogates the contradiction and violence of the twenty-first century, the misbegotten experiences that have given rise to a culture of authority and adulthood rather than one of innocence and childhood.

These spare lyrical shards move with a jagged but persistent direction—leading us between doubt and belief and toward Howe’s enduring vision for a life of humility, justice, and imagination.

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List Price
$18.00
ISBN
ISBN
978-1-64445-388-9
Format
Format
Paperback
Publication Date
Publication Date
Subject
Subject
Pages
Pages
144
Trim Size
Trim Size
6 x 9
Keynote
Celebrated poet Fanny Howe’s final book, a kaleidoscopic recasting of her twenty-first-century poems

About the Author

Fanny  Howe
Credit: Lynn Christoffers

Fanny Howe (1940–2025) was the author of many books, including Love and I, The Needle’s Eye, and Second Childhood, a finalist for the National Book Award. She received the Griffin Lifetime Recognition Award and the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize.

http://www.fannyhowe.com/

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Praise

  • This Poor Book is revelatory and casts Howe’s poetry in a new light, and for those who don’t know her work already, this is a perfect introduction. Fanny Howe is an essential poet, in what has become our time of the displaced.”—Rae Armantrout
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