No Other Kind of World: Poems
Jeff Hardin’s No Other Kind of World explores our “need to witness miracles” within a world that too often favors “soapbox diatribes/or mournful tones.” Perhaps we no longer recognize our own faces, unaware of what remains hidden inside, or just underneath, our landscapes or words. We wander an immeasurable world, one in which the Self attempts to know what knowing is, and calls out to others, searching for survivors this side of the millennium. Despite new threats of “a coming Inquisition,” Hardin “charts a course toward mercy,” seeking “the kind of understanding/that comes when two or more are gathered.”

IN THE PARK
Seven boys seem to think they’re birds.
They caw and hoot, running beneath
a stretch of thinned-out trees.  They raise
their arms to steer themselves toward each other
and through this maze of limbs dipped low.
Every minute growing louder seems to lessen.
And we talk of a need to witness miracles,
everyone flying so close at each other
until the last possible moment,
                                                then veering . . .
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No Other Kind of World: Poems
Jeff Hardin’s No Other Kind of World explores our “need to witness miracles” within a world that too often favors “soapbox diatribes/or mournful tones.” Perhaps we no longer recognize our own faces, unaware of what remains hidden inside, or just underneath, our landscapes or words. We wander an immeasurable world, one in which the Self attempts to know what knowing is, and calls out to others, searching for survivors this side of the millennium. Despite new threats of “a coming Inquisition,” Hardin “charts a course toward mercy,” seeking “the kind of understanding/that comes when two or more are gathered.”

IN THE PARK
Seven boys seem to think they’re birds.
They caw and hoot, running beneath
a stretch of thinned-out trees.  They raise
their arms to steer themselves toward each other
and through this maze of limbs dipped low.
Every minute growing louder seems to lessen.
And we talk of a need to witness miracles,
everyone flying so close at each other
until the last possible moment,
                                                then veering . . .
11.99 In Stock
No Other Kind of World: Poems

No Other Kind of World: Poems

by Jeff Hardin
No Other Kind of World: Poems

No Other Kind of World: Poems

by Jeff Hardin

eBook

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Overview

Jeff Hardin’s No Other Kind of World explores our “need to witness miracles” within a world that too often favors “soapbox diatribes/or mournful tones.” Perhaps we no longer recognize our own faces, unaware of what remains hidden inside, or just underneath, our landscapes or words. We wander an immeasurable world, one in which the Self attempts to know what knowing is, and calls out to others, searching for survivors this side of the millennium. Despite new threats of “a coming Inquisition,” Hardin “charts a course toward mercy,” seeking “the kind of understanding/that comes when two or more are gathered.”

IN THE PARK
Seven boys seem to think they’re birds.
They caw and hoot, running beneath
a stretch of thinned-out trees.  They raise
their arms to steer themselves toward each other
and through this maze of limbs dipped low.
Every minute growing louder seems to lessen.
And we talk of a need to witness miracles,
everyone flying so close at each other
until the last possible moment,
                                                then veering . . .

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781680031362
Publisher: Texas Review Press
Publication date: 02/24/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 80
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

JEFF HARDIN is the author of Fall Sanctuary, Notes for a Praise Book, Restoring the Narrative, and Small Revolution. He is professor of English at Columbia State Community College in Columbia, Tennessee.

Table of Contents

  • Immeasurable
  • A Different Country
  • How Many Lives Do You Have?
  • Plentitude
  • In Winter
  • Prosopagnosia
  • Always Upstream or Downstream
  • County Home Road
  • On the Eve of a New Millennium
  • Late September
  • Work Still To Do
  • Wondering Aloud
  • Henry Grower Road
  • A Short Distance from Mountains
  • To a Farmer Whose Fields Are Ruined
  • Letting out Line
  • Riding the Bloom Downward through Shades of Blue
  • Po-Biz Ghazal
  • As One Who’s Been Permitted …
  • Not That Clemency Is or Is Not on the Way
  • Holding on Underneath This Shroud
  • Before the Whole Display
  • A Part of Me High Up
  • A Search for Survivors
  • Transparency
  • No Other Kind of World
  • Old Man Praying
  • Letters
  • Each of Us a Mystery We Cannot Read Alone
  • In the Park
  • A New Earth
  • Prayer
  • I Once Was Lost
  • Acknowledgements
  • About the Author

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Columbia, TN

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