The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Barnes and Noble

Loading Inventory...
Motherland

Motherland in Chattanooga, TN

Current price: $20.00
Get it in StoreVisit retailer's website
Motherland

Barnes and Noble

Motherland in Chattanooga, TN

Current price: $20.00
Loading Inventory...

Size: OS

In
Motherland,
poet Heather Nelson leaves subjects like war, pestilence, and looming environmental catastrophe to others. Instead, she focuses her camera on the "ordinary" - observing how our bodies change with time, considering motherhood, and offering sharp, often poignant commentary on people and places in her life. She engages these subjects with intelligence, humor, a quiet elegance, and a touch of melancholy that brings depth to her musings. These are poems that reward repeat visits.
-
Charles Coe
,
Charles Coe: New and Selected Works
If
Motherland
is a boat navigating desire, memory, and change, Heather Nelson is coxswain - both tender and unflinching voice - guiding us through the passage of years, the pull of place. These poems form a collection of familiar, foreign, and dreamed landscapes. From dawn over Harvard Square to reimagining one's own shadow in an Italian piazza at midday, to Provincetown, just beyond the sea, that "curls with longing," Nelson engages melancholy, mischief, and joy. She declares of motherhood, "my body occupied, my arms always open," and cautions, as self-reclamation, "I chew brigadier bones," imagines riding through the city "bare chested on horseback."Intimate and universal threads of womanhood, longing, and the shifting "floodplain" of midlife map a reckoning with aging, family, and the aching beauty of what remains and what is lost, the way a city holds its history in brick and border because "without boundaries, there is no home."
Tzynya Pinchback
how to make pink confetti
Heather Nelson's perceptive and genuine debut collection,
is punctuated by longing and "fear of erasure." Immersing us in sensory detail en route to profound observations of human desire, these poems draw from the everyday life of a mother, teacher, and poet whose children are slowly leaving the house, and who sometimes just hates "every blossom for its derisive youthfulness and fertility." They are also full of spank: "Motherly love is / a form of Stockholm Syndrome." Brutally honest, while also nuanced and original in its articulation of the restlessness of the human condition, this collection provokes us to ask ourselves: Who are we? What is our value in this world? What makes us sufficient? This debut carries sagacious and earnest weight, a witness to our insatiable, existential hunger.
Ewa Chrusciel
Yours, Purple Gallinule
and six other books
In
Motherland,
poet Heather Nelson leaves subjects like war, pestilence, and looming environmental catastrophe to others. Instead, she focuses her camera on the "ordinary" - observing how our bodies change with time, considering motherhood, and offering sharp, often poignant commentary on people and places in her life. She engages these subjects with intelligence, humor, a quiet elegance, and a touch of melancholy that brings depth to her musings. These are poems that reward repeat visits.
-
Charles Coe
,
Charles Coe: New and Selected Works
If
Motherland
is a boat navigating desire, memory, and change, Heather Nelson is coxswain - both tender and unflinching voice - guiding us through the passage of years, the pull of place. These poems form a collection of familiar, foreign, and dreamed landscapes. From dawn over Harvard Square to reimagining one's own shadow in an Italian piazza at midday, to Provincetown, just beyond the sea, that "curls with longing," Nelson engages melancholy, mischief, and joy. She declares of motherhood, "my body occupied, my arms always open," and cautions, as self-reclamation, "I chew brigadier bones," imagines riding through the city "bare chested on horseback."Intimate and universal threads of womanhood, longing, and the shifting "floodplain" of midlife map a reckoning with aging, family, and the aching beauty of what remains and what is lost, the way a city holds its history in brick and border because "without boundaries, there is no home."
Tzynya Pinchback
how to make pink confetti
Heather Nelson's perceptive and genuine debut collection,
is punctuated by longing and "fear of erasure." Immersing us in sensory detail en route to profound observations of human desire, these poems draw from the everyday life of a mother, teacher, and poet whose children are slowly leaving the house, and who sometimes just hates "every blossom for its derisive youthfulness and fertility." They are also full of spank: "Motherly love is / a form of Stockholm Syndrome." Brutally honest, while also nuanced and original in its articulation of the restlessness of the human condition, this collection provokes us to ask ourselves: Who are we? What is our value in this world? What makes us sufficient? This debut carries sagacious and earnest weight, a witness to our insatiable, existential hunger.
Ewa Chrusciel
Yours, Purple Gallinule
and six other books

More About Barnes and Noble at Hamilton Place

Barnes & Noble is the world’s largest retail bookseller and a leading retailer of content, digital media and educational products. Our Nook Digital business offers a lineup of NOOK® tablets and e-Readers and an expansive collection of digital reading content through the NOOK Store®. Barnes & Noble’s mission is to operate the best omni-channel specialty retail business in America, helping both our customers and booksellers reach their aspirations, while being a credit to the communities we serve.

2100 Hamilton Pl Blvd, Chattanooga, TN 37421, United States

Find Barnes and Noble at Hamilton Place in Chattanooga, TN

Visit Barnes and Noble at Hamilton Place in Chattanooga, TN
Powered by Adeptmind