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    978-0-8223-3639-6
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  • On the Selection  ix
    I  
    State Road 134  3
    My Grandfather's Funeral  4
    Driving Through a Country America  6
    The Sunplane  7
    Leaf Mirrors  8
    William Blackburn, Riding Westward  9
    Looking for a Home in the South  11
    Discardings  12
    Visit with Artina  13
    A Kid at the County Fair  15
    Revisitings  16
    Zeppelin Fantasy  17
    Bordering Manuscript  18
    To Alexander Solzhenitsyn, in Exile  19
    War Summer  20
    A Southern Elegy  21
    II  
    The Capsized Boat  25
    On the Homefront  26
    A Vigil  27
    A Garden's Season  28
    Iron River  29
    With Darkening Foliage  30
    Diamond of Shadow  31
    A Forge of Words  32
    Combat Station  33
    To Forgive this Inheritance  34
    Images, Burning  35
    A Minister, Crippled  36
    Keeper of the Dragon's Teeth  37
    Boundary Stones  38
    III  
    Tobacco Men  41
    Drinking Music  42
    Building in the Country  43
    Roadside Notes in Ragged Hand  44
    Water  46
    Blood Ties: For Jan  47
    Pamlico River  48
    January Farmhouse  49
    White Lake  50
    Firewood  51
    Some Words for Fall  53
    From as Far Away as Dying  54
    The Mary Tapes  55
    IV  
    Iron Age Flying  65
    English Church Towers  68
    Evening in Bath  69
    Royal Hospital  70
    Beginning with Egypt (The British Museum)  71
    Foreseeing the Journey  72
    V  
    Jonquils  77
    Collards  78
    A Leaf of Tobacco  79
    Barbecue Service  80
    Southern Voices  81
    The Morning After  83
    Greene County Pastoral  84
    Quitting Time  86
    How to Fix a Pig (as told by Dee Grimes)  87
    The Advisors  89
    VI  
    World's Shoulder, Turning  93
    The Ford  94
    Crossing on Cables  95
    Constructing the River  96
    Just Rain  97
    Tree of Babel  98
    Clear Winter  99
    Like a Body in the River  100
    The Sense of Light  101
    When the Night Falls  102
    In Sight of the Self  103
    Buzzard's Roost  104
    An Orphaned Voice  105
    House of Seasons  106
    The Water-Machine  107
    The Sex of Divinity  108
    Light Beyond Thought  109
    Out of My Circle  110
    Prayer for My Son  111
    The Bison  112
    Bridge Back Toward the South  114
    Driving Toward Cairo  115
    Rivers  116
    The Self, that Dark Star  117
    Sleeping with Stars an Bulbs, Time and Its Signs  118b
    The War Against Nature  121
    The Student Pilot Sleeps  122
    Lessons in Soaring  123
    Art and the Garden  125
    The Failure in Southern Representation  126
    A Place and a Voice  128
    Greenhouse Effect  134
    The Descent  135
    A Conversation  136
    VIII  
    Storm in the Briar Patch  143
    Home Team  144
    A Wilson County Farmer  145
    Time at Seven Springs: An Elegy  146
    After Winslow Homer's Images of Blacks  148
    The Cemetery Next to Contentnea  150
    A Father and Son  152
    Light's Praise  154
    IX  
    A Voice at the River Park  157
    Botanical Garden: The Costal Plains  159
    Autumnal Equinox  160
    Letter to My Wife, from Minnesota  161
    A Tapestry in the Mirror in the Palazzo Pamphili  163
    Sailing the Inlet  164
    A Distant Father  166
    Interstate Highway  168
    Grandfather Wordsworth  170
  • Winner, Roanoke-Chowan Award for Poetry, North Carolina Literary and Historical Association

  • "The publication of James Applewhite's Selected Poems is a signal event in the history of North Carolina literature. . . . [A] volume of uncommon consistency, a sort of spiritual autobiography less concerned with chronological circumstance than with recurrent themes, moods and motifs. . . . [M]y admiration has rarely dimmed in 50 years of study. When this poetry later gained the approval of such literary luminaries as Donald Justice, John Hollander, James Dickey and others, I did not need to feel vindicated. From the beginning, Applewhite's lines have borne the stamp of excellence, the signature of the genuine. Selected Poems is a landmark."

    —Fred Chappell, News and Observer

    "When reading [Selected Poems], it isn't difficult to feel as if we are in the hands of a skilled and trusted guide. Applewhite's creative judgement in these poems is pretty much beyond reproach. [His] lovely, unassuming, and clarifying last lines are the kind poetry could use more of today."—Daniel Anderson, Duke Magazine

    "The human songs of death and love, religion and family, closing the collection convey Applewhite's status as a notable in Southern literary history As a Southerner, I'm drawn to the center of the book, Section Five, where form and native language combine into beauty. . . . [I] will keep Applewhite close to my heart. The South still contains the scenes James Applewhite has observed and brings here into rich focus and perspective in this new collection."—Leah Hughes, Southern Arts Journal

    “For those who enjoy narrative poems with familiar landmarks—rural North Carolina landmarks—these poems from nine collections over 30 years will delight.” —Dannye Romine Powell, Charlotte Observer

    “[T]hese poems demonstrate a genuine gift for figurative thinking and writing; often they provide extraordinary recastings of the extra ordinary. , , , In these portraits and meditations we see a poet who deserves acclaim not just across the South, but across the nation.”—Robert M. West, Southern Cultures

    “[A] substantial book from a poet too-often deemed "southern," somehow managing to be at once somber and lavish, a poet like Wordsworth of ideas advanced and developed as images.”—George Witte (on his blog, Poetpeeve)

    “For my money, Applewhite is one of the best poets around at capturing the grace and rhythms of the haunting Southern landscape. . . . Applewhite recently published a “best of” collection that captures the terrible beauty of the natural world and the timeless legacy of small Southern towns like no one else I’ve ever read. Make no mistake: Applewhite does not dally in provincial lullabies. He is a master of verse spinning lyrical lines about collard greens and tobacco leaves, and isn’t afraid to journey into the paradoxes and idiosyncrasies of the South, which, in turn, become metaphors for our own lives.”—Michael Beadle, Smoky Mountain News

    “James Applewhite's Selected Poems traces a world ranging from the rural landscape of his South with its cross-roads and tobacco to England's churches to the more universal subjects of time and children. . . . Perhaps the most compelling poems in this vein are two late ones in the collection, ‘A Distant Father’ and ‘Interstate Highway.’ In the second of these, a poem dedicated to Applewhite's daughter, traffic, here a collective figure for us all, moves over a landscape much as a river might, ‘exiting and rejoining . . . so closely linked that, / if seen from above’ it makes a ‘stasis of lights,’ and ‘the pattern we bead is constant.’ Constancy, no small matter, characterizes James Applewhite's poetry.”
    —Wyatt Prunty, The Weekly Standard

    “Perhaps because he has tried his hand at flying, or because he has long been an amateur student of astronomy, Applewhite’s poems . . . tend to lift off the earth and take the long, interplanetary or even intergalactic view of things. . . . Applewhite soars.”—Emily Grosholz, The Hudson Review

    “Poet/critic Dave Smith has called Applewhite’s work ‘rugged and refined, classical in decorum and local in idiom, deep in wisdom and clear as water in freshness.’ That clarity and freshness is made even more apparent as this volume presents Applewhite’s poems in their intended order and logic.”American Poet

    “Applewhite conveys an intimacy with land that’s increasingly rare in a culture of frequent flyer miles and truncated attention spans. People and place are so seamlessly entwined here that they know each other like longtime lovers, when ‘no words ... are enough.’ . . . Integrity of craft and compassion merge in what Applewhite terms his ‘seasoned diary.’”—Melanie Drane, Foreword

    Awards

  • Winner, Roanoke-Chowan Award for Poetry, North Carolina Literary and Historical Association

  • Reviews

  • "The publication of James Applewhite's Selected Poems is a signal event in the history of North Carolina literature. . . . [A] volume of uncommon consistency, a sort of spiritual autobiography less concerned with chronological circumstance than with recurrent themes, moods and motifs. . . . [M]y admiration has rarely dimmed in 50 years of study. When this poetry later gained the approval of such literary luminaries as Donald Justice, John Hollander, James Dickey and others, I did not need to feel vindicated. From the beginning, Applewhite's lines have borne the stamp of excellence, the signature of the genuine. Selected Poems is a landmark."

    —Fred Chappell, News and Observer

    "When reading [Selected Poems], it isn't difficult to feel as if we are in the hands of a skilled and trusted guide. Applewhite's creative judgement in these poems is pretty much beyond reproach. [His] lovely, unassuming, and clarifying last lines are the kind poetry could use more of today."—Daniel Anderson, Duke Magazine

    "The human songs of death and love, religion and family, closing the collection convey Applewhite's status as a notable in Southern literary history As a Southerner, I'm drawn to the center of the book, Section Five, where form and native language combine into beauty. . . . [I] will keep Applewhite close to my heart. The South still contains the scenes James Applewhite has observed and brings here into rich focus and perspective in this new collection."—Leah Hughes, Southern Arts Journal

    “For those who enjoy narrative poems with familiar landmarks—rural North Carolina landmarks—these poems from nine collections over 30 years will delight.” —Dannye Romine Powell, Charlotte Observer

    “[T]hese poems demonstrate a genuine gift for figurative thinking and writing; often they provide extraordinary recastings of the extra ordinary. , , , In these portraits and meditations we see a poet who deserves acclaim not just across the South, but across the nation.”—Robert M. West, Southern Cultures

    “[A] substantial book from a poet too-often deemed "southern," somehow managing to be at once somber and lavish, a poet like Wordsworth of ideas advanced and developed as images.”—George Witte (on his blog, Poetpeeve)

    “For my money, Applewhite is one of the best poets around at capturing the grace and rhythms of the haunting Southern landscape. . . . Applewhite recently published a “best of” collection that captures the terrible beauty of the natural world and the timeless legacy of small Southern towns like no one else I’ve ever read. Make no mistake: Applewhite does not dally in provincial lullabies. He is a master of verse spinning lyrical lines about collard greens and tobacco leaves, and isn’t afraid to journey into the paradoxes and idiosyncrasies of the South, which, in turn, become metaphors for our own lives.”—Michael Beadle, Smoky Mountain News

    “James Applewhite's Selected Poems traces a world ranging from the rural landscape of his South with its cross-roads and tobacco to England's churches to the more universal subjects of time and children. . . . Perhaps the most compelling poems in this vein are two late ones in the collection, ‘A Distant Father’ and ‘Interstate Highway.’ In the second of these, a poem dedicated to Applewhite's daughter, traffic, here a collective figure for us all, moves over a landscape much as a river might, ‘exiting and rejoining . . . so closely linked that, / if seen from above’ it makes a ‘stasis of lights,’ and ‘the pattern we bead is constant.’ Constancy, no small matter, characterizes James Applewhite's poetry.”
    —Wyatt Prunty, The Weekly Standard

    “Perhaps because he has tried his hand at flying, or because he has long been an amateur student of astronomy, Applewhite’s poems . . . tend to lift off the earth and take the long, interplanetary or even intergalactic view of things. . . . Applewhite soars.”—Emily Grosholz, The Hudson Review

    “Poet/critic Dave Smith has called Applewhite’s work ‘rugged and refined, classical in decorum and local in idiom, deep in wisdom and clear as water in freshness.’ That clarity and freshness is made even more apparent as this volume presents Applewhite’s poems in their intended order and logic.”American Poet

    “Applewhite conveys an intimacy with land that’s increasingly rare in a culture of frequent flyer miles and truncated attention spans. People and place are so seamlessly entwined here that they know each other like longtime lovers, when ‘no words ... are enough.’ . . . Integrity of craft and compassion merge in what Applewhite terms his ‘seasoned diary.’”—Melanie Drane, Foreword

  • “James Applewhite writes of his childhood and later life in rural North Carolina (‘places not much in anyone’s thoughts’) in language whose timeless gravity and sweetness are close to sublime. An essential book.”—John Ashbery

    “James Applewhite has individuated a logical and meditative voice all his own. I cannot think of more than a few living American poets who fuse so remarkably intellect and emotion.”—Harold Bloom

    “James Applewhite and Seamus Heaney are the same kind of talents and Applewhite’s Selected Poems suggests accomplishment worthy of comparison. It is rugged and refined, classical in decorum and local in idiom, deep in wisdom and clear as water in freshness. It is a compact, luminous etching of a singular imagination working to get down the way it was and is in this place on the planet.”—Dave Smith

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  • Description

    James Applewhite has produced nine extraordinary books of poetry. This volume is the first anthology of his remarkable oeuvre. It brings together chronologically arranged selections from all of his previous books, from the first, published in 1975, through the most recent, published in 2002. Applewhite’s poetry is deeply rooted in the history and rhythms of rural North Carolina, where he was born and raised, and these poems mark stages in an artistic and personal journey he has undertaken over the past thirty years.

    In impeccable and surprising language, Applewhite depicts the social conventions, changes, frictions, and continuities of small southern towns. He celebrates that which he values as decent and life-enhancing, and his veneration is perhaps most apparent in his response to the natural world, to the rivers and trees and flowers. Yet Applewhite’s love for his native land is not straightforward. His verse chronicles his conflicted feelings for the region that gave him the initial, evocative language of place and immersed him in a blazing sensory world while it also bequeathed the distortions, denials, and prejudices that make it so painful a labyrinth. Rendering troubled legacies as well as profound decency, Applewhite reveals the universally human in a distinctively local voice, within dramatic and mundane moments of hope and sorrow and faith.

    About The Author(s)

    James Applewhite’s books of poetry include A Diary of Altered Light (forthcoming), Quartet for Three Voices (2002), Daytime and Starlight (1997), and A History of the River (1993). He has received numerous awards, including the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters Jean Stein Award in Poetry, the Associated Writing Programs Award in Poetry, and the North Carolina Award in Literature. Applewhite is Professor of English at Duke University, where he has taught since 1972.
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