Early Occult Memory Systems of the Lower Midwest
Poems
B. H. Fairchild (Author)
Winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award.
B. H. Fairchild's memory systems are the collective vision of America's despairing dreamers—failed baseball players, oil field laborers, a surrealist priest, college boys at a burlesque theater, the last remaining cast members of The Wizard of Oz. Looming over all is the fact and the mystery of our continued renewal.
Book Details
- Paperback
- June 2004
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ISBN 978-0-393-32566-9
- 5.5 × 8.3 in
/ 144 pages
- Territory Rights: Worldwide
Awards
Endorsements & Reviews
“These poems are an ecstatic celebration of language—long, lavish lines sprawling across the page as the speaker's consciousness roams the Kansas countryside. Fairchild is a spinner of tales who writes unforgettably of loneliness and the tenderness of the Midwest.” — Chicago Tribune
“There is no more lyric celebration of America's grandeurs and desolations than in this superb collection of poems.” — Anthony Hecht
“These poems make a rare, magical conjunction between a communal sense of place and a solitary habit of memory.” — Eavan Bloand
“What an exaltation!” — Richard Howard
“Fairchild is in touch with that America we almost forgot, melancholy, dream-ridden, wistful, ghost-like.” — Gerald Stern
Also by B. H. Fairchild 
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Paperback
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