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Titles > Literary Non-Fiction
> Living
In The World As If It Were Home

Living
In The World As If It Were Home
by Tim Lilburn
Literary Non-Fiction
Literary Criticism
135 pages
Trade Paper w/ French Flaps
4.5" X 7"
ISBN: 1896951147
$16.95
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Living
in the World As If It Were Home
by Tim Lilburn
Written over a nine-year span, Living In The World As If It Were
Home is a careful, exquisite look at the human desire to share a
home with long grass, rivers, and stones, by poet Tim Lilburn. Lilburn's
collection of essays plots the work required to roughly re-establish
the condistions of Paradise; it explores the world of priries rivers,
aspen-covered sandhills, deer country, big lakes taking on their
first ice in late October, the moon rising over chokecherry thickets,
and asks: how to be here?
There's nother glib about the answer Lilburn offers as he
says in one of his poems: "The way back will be hard, ghost road
through the rooms of sorrow/moon of contemplation on our backs."
Though hard, however, the way is readily available: plain delight,
he believes, knows the way. But the project to live in the world
as though it were home requires the recovery of the full resources
of human desire. The muscle of eros needs to be made strong. To
do this, Lilburn turns to those almost forgotten masters of desire,
the mystics of the negative way, psuedo-Dionysius, the anonymous
author of The Cloud of Unknowing and John Scotus Eriugena.
This is a remarkable collection, a "classic" as Dennis
Lee says in his foreword, by a writer with passion and insight,
in hopeless love with the unsayable world, the place wich "ignites
awe" yet is completely vulnerable to human ingenuity.
About Tim Lilburn. |
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"All
Lilburn's meditations have that animal gusto, even at their most
formidably intellectual. I suspect the book in which they've been
gathered will stand as a minor classic... Poet, contemplative
thinker, hot-blooded lover of trees and rivers: is there anyone
else like Lilburn? The type is rare, but it's not unknown. In
this country, you find a similar combination in Hector de Saint-Denys-Gardneau
and Robert Bringhurst, to name just two... But Lilburn is his
own man, and there is no need to strain for comparisons. Where
he will go next is anybody's guess. Meanwhile, we have Living
In The World As If It Were Home to be grateful for."
Dennis Lee
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