About the Book
The strength of Tim Hunt's nature poems drew me into this book. His observation of light, rocks, a hawk and a field mouse in 'High Desert Summer, ' a California landscape, is so intense that he seems to long to become part of it. Then come the poems honoring and loving his family, whose history is made up of men and women 'getting by, ' 'learning to make do, ' acquiring 'that tricky pride of the poor--the failing that is success.' Here is a poet standing on the threshold of existence, acutely aware of the humans, both living and dead, existing in the rooms behind him, but wanting, 'other times, ' the consolation of nature. His ambivalence is a strength and enrichment, not only for him, but for his fortunate readers--Judith Hemschemeyer.
About the Author :
A fourth-generation native of Northern California, Tim Hunt was born in Calistoga and raised primarily in Sebastopol, two small towns north of San Francisco. Educated at Cornell University, he has taught American literature at several schools, including Washington State University and Deep Springs College. He is currently Professor of English at Illinois State University, in Normal, Illinois. Hunt's poetry has been widely published in magazines, and he has published the chapbook Lake County Diamond. He has also been awarded the Chester H. Jones Prize for the poem "Lake County Elegy." FAULT LINES is his first full-length collection. His scholarly publications include Kerouac's Crooked Road: Development of a Fiction and the five-volume edition The Collected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers. Tim Hunt's website is located at www.tahunt.com.
Review :
“In Fault Lines Tim Hunt charts the plate tectonics of family history and Western landscape, revealing a kind of resilience displayed equally in both. In these beautiful poems, reminiscent of the best of Jeffers, Everson, and Snyder, Hunt’s unerring ear and eye bring to life a West we hardly knew we missed.”-Michael Davidson
“Tim Hunt is a poet of the American West, of the coastal mountains, and the desert valleys. He is also a poet of the landscape of language, where the reader is surprised by luminous detail, sharp-edged memory. The beauty of this world is made more intense by knowing of the fractures underneath the surface, of the land, of speech, of habit, and family connection, threatening to jolt us into new perspectives, deeper recognition.”-Robert Morgan
“The strength of Tim Hunt’s nature poems drew me into this book. His observation of light, rocks, a hawk, and a field mouse in ‘High Desert Summer,’ a California landscape, is so intense that he seems to long to become part of it. Then come the poems honoring and loving his family, whose history is made up of men and women ‘getting by,’ ‘learning to make do,’ acquiring ‘that tricky pride of the poor-the failing that is success.’. . . His ambivalence is a strength and enrichment, not only for him, but for his fortunate readers.”-Judith Hemschemeyer
“In a four-part harmony of conceptual blends and metaphoric resonances that grid and bridge the subterranean spasms, leavings, and losses of generational memory, Tim Hunt’s elegiac speaker spellbinds a ‘wholeness of dislocations.’ The ‘trick,’ the voice discovers, is ‘to read what was’ in what now exists in the long present of a lifetime, making language out of the silences and images out of the absences to recover invisibles that make the present make some sense. Fault Lines creates this subtle language of implication, humming a music of loss in the registers of blues, jazz, and rock ‘n’ roll-an ‘algebra’ of fret and string that voices paths through the faults.”-Lucia Cordell Getsi
“Tim Hunt is a landscape artist, like his master, Robinson Jeffers. Unlike Jeffers, Hunt knows ‘the ache of so much space to fill with the human,’ as he says in one of his best poems, ‘Stories.’ He has learned a lot from Jeffers, a great poet of resonant inhuman spaces. But the humanity filling Hunt’s poems is all his own.”-Mark Jarman