About the Book
Best Books of 2011, Kansas City Star "[Jarman's] poems explore faith in its many manifestations, but there is something here transcendent that speaks to everyone. Highly recommended."--Library JournalBone Fires collects work from over thirty years and charts Mark Jarman's spiritual development as he grows from a poet of childhood and nostalgia through adulthood and the struggles of faith. The section of new poems includes work published in American Poetry Review, Georgia Review, The New Republic, Poetry, and in the yearly anthology Best American Poetry. A landmark collection from one of our nation's most distinguished poets.
Table of Contents:
How My Sister, My Mother, and Still Travel Down Balwearie Road
New Poems
The Wee Spider
Family Fugue
Your Neighbor as Yourself
Time Machine
Haiku
Mary Smart
The Prayer Chain
Snoring
In the Rose Garden
Encounter
Monday
To a Brainy Child in Distress
Ending with a Line by Curtis Mayfield
Last Walk at Home
R. S. Thomas
Dispatches from Devereux Slough
Interesting Times
Bone Fires
From North Sea (1978)
Foreigners
We Dare Not Go A-Hunting
Planting
The Close
My Parents Have Come Home Laughing
Kicking the Candles Out
Goodbye to a Poltergeist
Lullaby for Amy
From The Rote Walker (1981)
Greensleeves
Ascension of the Red Madonna
Glossolalia
Accordion Music
The Spell
Descriptions of Heaven and Hell
The Rote Walker
What Child Is This?
From Far and Away (1985)
Far and Away
The Supremes
By-Blows
While You Are Gone I Look for Constellations
Poem in June
The City in the Sea
Cavafy in Redondo
From The Black Riviera (1990)
The Children
The Black Riviera
Awakened by Sea Lions
The Shrine and the Burning Wheel
Days of ‘74
Good Friday
The Gift
Miss Urquhart’s Tiara
From Questions for Ecclesiastes (1997)
Ground Swell
Transfiguration
Proverbs
Dressing My Daughters
After Disappointment
Wave
Grid
Questions for Ecclesiastes
Upwelling
Unholy Sonnets
Last Suppers
The Worry Bird
From Unholy Sonnets (2000)
Prologue
The Word “Answer”
Someone Is Always Praying
Cycle
Breath Like a House Fly
Sightings
Nothing But Pleasure
The World
Epilogue
From To the Green Man (2004)
To the Green Man
Testimony of a Roasted Chicken
Butterflies Under Persimmon
Astragaloi
Fox Night
As Close as Breathing
In the Tube
In Church with Hart Crane
George Herbert
The Excitement
Five Psalms
Canticle
Song of Roland
Over the River and Through the Woods
The Secret Ocean
Summer
Coyotes
A Pair of Tanagers
Prayer for Our Daughters
From Epistles (2007)
In the Clouds
For the Birds
To the Trees
On the Street
Through the Waves
About the Author :
Mark Jarman is the author of nine books of poetry: North Sea (1978), The Rote Walker (1981), Far and Away (1985), The Black Riviera (1990), Iris (1992), Questions for Ecclesiastes (1997), Unholy Sonnets (2000), To the Green Man (2004), and Epistles (2007). He has also published two collections of his prose, The Secret of Poetry (2000) and Body and Soul: Essays on Poetry (2001). Jarman is an elector of the American Poets' Corner at the Cathedral Church of Saint John the Divine in New York City. His awards include a Joseph Henry Jackson Award for his poetry, grants from the National Endowment for the Arts in poetry, and a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation fellowship in poetry. His book The Black Riviera won the 1991 Poets' Prize. Questions for Ecclesiastes won the 1998 Lenore Marshall Poetry prize from the Academy of American Poets and The Nation magazine. He is Centennial Professor of English at Vanderbilt University.
Review :
This is precisely what a new-and-selected collection should be: a book better as well as bigger than any of those its contents are culled from. Confirming the poet’s intergrity and consistency, it attests an invaluably unique poetic personality.”
Ray Olson, Booklist (starred review)
Subdued and tender, almost without a false move, these pages (reminiscent of Carl Dennis) return to the scenes of his first work, the source of his strength. Readers who think they know Jarman all too well may find an enlightening surprise.”
Publishers Weekly
Finally, I admire the way Mark Jarman’s poetry worries spiritual concerns while remaining rooted in the everyday. His Bone Fires: New and Selected Poems collects poems from eight volumes, starting with 1978’s North Sea, and includes 19 new pieces that are as always brave and honest. . . . A great overview collection.”
Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal
Following the development of Jarman’s poetry and his uncompromising vision of poetry-making as sacred work, our contributor, Michelle Boisseau, found herself amazed again and again at how the unaffected discipline of Jarman’s craft helps him plumb the reaches of human experience. One of the most moving and exhilarating experiences she had this year reading poetry.”
Kansas City Star
This volume of Mark Jarman’s selected poems represents more than thirty years of work and eight books of poetry. The collection offers a look at Jarman’s transition from writing focused on nostalgia and childhood to poems centered on faith and spirituality and the struggle inherent in those ideals.”
American Poet
The myriad gifts of this gathering of poems confirm that Jarman is one of America’s most distinct and important voices, and prove that it is possible to sustain an original style over a long career (in Jarman’s case, an understated, wry, perspicacious, darkly complicated and formal engagement with belief and unbelief) while avoiding self-parody of a falling off of vision.”
Lisa Russ Spaar, Image
Jarman’s spiritual questions intersect within fact, are inseparable fromhis profound regard for the natural world. . . . His just-released collection, Bone Fires: New and Selected Poems, includes recent poems that regard the confounding violence and beauty at the center of life.
Maria Browning, Chapter 16
I wish every congregation could have a Mark Jarman in its midst, because a poet’s tithe of attention and language is as valuable as the widow’s mite. Bone Fireswith its meditations on faith and doubt, hope and silence, and the sacred and desecrated fragments of God’s worldis a gift to the whole church and the whole creation.”
Katherine Willis Pershey, The Christian Century
"Jarman’s new poems are as good as any of his career. . . . Bone Fires serves well as an introduction to the poet’s work, but it must also be welcome to pre-existing Jarman fans. Although there are only 19 new poems, they tackle the full range of his obsessionsfaith, of course, but also family, history, and regret. At 58, Jarman is by no means at the end of his career, in spite of the common assumption that accompanies a book of selected works. This poet seems to anticipate this assumption and answers it in the opening poem, How My Sister, My Mother, and I Still Travel Down Balwearie Road,” which concludes, It is still cold, still dark, just as I said, and late. But not as late as I thought.”
Erica Wright, ForeWord Reviews
Bone Fires is an excellent representative collection of Jarman’s work, perfect for those who are longtime fans or reading him for the first time.”
New Pages
"Jarman, who teaches at Vanderbilt University, writes about family life, memory, grace, the night sky and other mysteries divine."
Ray Waddle, The Tennessean
“This is precisely what a new-and-selected collection should be: a book better as well as bigger than any of those its contents are culled from. Confirming the poet’s intergrity and consistency, it attests an invaluably unique poetic personality.”
—Ray Olson, Booklist (starred review)
“Subdued and tender, almost without a false move, these pages (reminiscent of Carl Dennis) return to the scenes of his first work, the source of his strength. Readers who think they know Jarman all too well may find an enlightening surprise.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Finally, I admire the way Mark Jarman’s poetry worries spiritual concerns while remaining rooted in the everyday. His Bone Fires: New and Selected Poems collects poems from eight volumes, starting with 1978’s North Sea, and includes 19 new pieces that are as always brave and honest. . . . A great overview collection.”
—Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal
“Following the development of Jarman’s poetry and his uncompromising vision of poetry-making as sacred work, our contributor, Michelle Boisseau, found herself amazed again and again at how the unaffected discipline of Jarman’s craft helps him plumb the reaches of human experience. One of the most moving and exhilarating experiences she had this year reading poetry.”
—Kansas City Star
“This volume of Mark Jarman’s selected poems represents more than thirty years of work and eight books of poetry. The collection offers a look at Jarman’s transition from writing focused on nostalgia and childhood to poems centered on faith and spirituality and the struggle inherent in those ideals.”
—American Poet
“The myriad gifts of this gathering of poems confirm that Jarman is one of America’s most distinct and important voices, and prove that it is possible to sustain an original style over a long career (in Jarman’s case, an understated, wry, perspicacious, darkly complicated and formal engagement with belief and unbelief) while avoiding self-parody of a falling off of vision.”
—Lisa Russ Spaar, Image
“Jarman’s spiritual questions intersect with—in fact, are inseparable from—his profound regard for the natural world. . . . His just-released collection, Bone Fires: New and Selected Poems, includes recent poems that regard the confounding violence and beauty at the center of life.
—Maria Browning, Chapter 16
“I wish every congregation could have a Mark Jarman in its midst, because a poet’s tithe of attention and language is as valuable as the widow’s mite. Bone Fires—with its meditations on faith and doubt, hope and silence, and the sacred and desecrated fragments of God’s world—is a gift to the whole church and the whole creation.”
—Katherine Willis Pershey, The Christian Century
"Jarman’s new poems are as good as any of his career. . . . Bone Fires serves well as an introduction to the poet’s work, but it must also be welcome to pre-existing Jarman fans. Although there are only 19 new poems, they tackle the full range of his obsessions—faith, of course, but also family, history, and regret. At 58, Jarman is by no means at the end of his career, in spite of the common assumption that accompanies a book of selected works. This poet seems to anticipate this assumption and answers it in the opening poem, “How My Sister, My Mother, and I Still Travel Down Balwearie Road,” which concludes, “It is still cold, still dark, just as I said, and late. But not as late as I thought.”
—Erica Wright, ForeWord Reviews
“Bone Fires is an excellent representative collection of Jarman’s work, perfect for those who are longtime fans or reading him for the first time.”
—New Pages
"Jarman, who teaches at Vanderbilt University, writes about family life, memory, grace, the night sky and other mysteries divine."
—Ray Waddle, The Tennessean