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An Accounting of Days (The Cox Family Poetry Chapbook Series)

An Accounting of Days (The Cox Family Poetry Chapbook Series)

Current price: $12.00
Publication Date: February 20th, 2024
Publisher:
Carnegie Mellon University Press
ISBN:
9780887487026
Pages:
32
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Description

Poems that capture a lifetime.

An Accounting of Days by Charles Seluzicki gathers poems drawn from moments in his personal history. Structurally, the poems move along a chronological timeline, starting with early memory and following the stepping stones of experience.

About the Author

Charles Seluzicki was born in Baltimore, Maryland. He has been an antiquarian bookseller and fine press publisher since 1977 when he began to issue books under the imprints of Charles Seluzicki Fine Books, Trace Editions, and Editions Plane. His publishing archive is held by Emory University, Atlanta.

Praise for An Accounting of Days (The Cox Family Poetry Chapbook Series)

"An Accounting of Days is a memory-haunted book. Lyrical snapshots of a life. Joy, desire, pain, it’s all here: The world before birth like a stage being set, then birth as we put on our costumes and go forth into these frozen moments of wonder and discovery, love and loss, in this tragic and joyful dance of days—that is for each of us, a parallel journey—on into the great unknowing of the end."
— Michael Fallon

"Chicken heads strapped to bobbing crab pots, mating coral snakes under threat of a sheriff’s shotgun, lacey ironwork and cobblestones—these are some of the colorfast moments that crackle in Charles Seluzicki’s An Accounting of Days. As the purity of youthful experience mutates into unsettling weight in later years, I time travel with him into the duality of my own memories, into their blend of wonder and wistfulness. Infused with bits of humor and drenched with poignant notes, these poems are a testament to the 'tangled privacy' of reminiscence, to the way we manifest in all of its changing forms, and to the brief moments of resolution we can find in a sweet croon."
— Caroline Wilcox Reul, translator of In the morning we are glass