The List of Dangers

Fiction & Literature, Poetry
Cover of the book The List of Dangers by Maggie Smith, Kent State University Press
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Author: Maggie Smith ISBN: 9781612779966
Publisher: Kent State University Press Publication: January 20, 2013
Imprint: Kent State University Press Language: English
Author: Maggie Smith
ISBN: 9781612779966
Publisher: Kent State University Press
Publication: January 20, 2013
Imprint: Kent State University Press
Language: English
“Tight and purposeful as a fable, The List of Dangers gives us sorrows and warnings from a world imbalanced by beasts and little beauties. The images are precise as a childs playroom—keyholes, miniature candelabra, the trebly notes of wrens and gypsies— but perilous in their tender transformations. Maggie Smiths rich lyric gifts produce here a poetry of balancing composure in the face of peril and pretty chance.”—David Baker, author of Midwest Eclogue “In Maggie Smiths The List of Dangers, as in the Brothers Grimm, we learn early how hazardous life is and how eagerly our fate awaits us. In these inventive new poems, Smith borrows elements from folktales, fairy tales, and fables to remind us once again that Nothing stays good for long and No one [is] preserved. And just as before, were thrilled by each tale and tickled to death at our own imperilment.”—Kathy Fagan, author of Lip
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
“Tight and purposeful as a fable, The List of Dangers gives us sorrows and warnings from a world imbalanced by beasts and little beauties. The images are precise as a childs playroom—keyholes, miniature candelabra, the trebly notes of wrens and gypsies— but perilous in their tender transformations. Maggie Smiths rich lyric gifts produce here a poetry of balancing composure in the face of peril and pretty chance.”—David Baker, author of Midwest Eclogue “In Maggie Smiths The List of Dangers, as in the Brothers Grimm, we learn early how hazardous life is and how eagerly our fate awaits us. In these inventive new poems, Smith borrows elements from folktales, fairy tales, and fables to remind us once again that Nothing stays good for long and No one [is] preserved. And just as before, were thrilled by each tale and tickled to death at our own imperilment.”—Kathy Fagan, author of Lip

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