02711nam 2200541 450 991078786760332120230803195354.01-60938-253-6(CKB)2670000000530905(EBL)1641891(SSID)ssj0001215827(PQKBManifestationID)11816911(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001215827(PQKBWorkID)11190213(PQKB)11301622(MiAaPQ)EBC1641891(OCoLC)871780775(MdBmJHUP)muse35040(Au-PeEL)EBL1641891(CaPaEBR)ebr10845667(EXLCZ)99267000000053090520140317h20142014 uy 1engur|n|---|||||txtccrLa far /Eric LinskerIowa City, Iowa :University Of Iowa Press,2014.©20141 online resource (115 p.)Winner of the Iowa Poetry Prize1-60938-241-2 Satisfaction of the instincts -- Idioteque -- Stationing -- App -- Ode (distracted) -- Multitude -- The environment -- Operative spring -- Under Aegis -- Common day -- Pyramid song -- Historical ecstasy -- Both sides -- Work -- Facts after Baudelaire -- Arena -- Fluid achievement -- Play -- Temporary activities -- Reasoning of sea -- Figure -- Available -- A place where everything is visible -- Dongzhou Sea -- Tower -- Amaryllis -- In the raid instances -- The unities -- Love streams -- Irreversibility ode -- We're so social now -- State -- Sea of land -- Orometry -- Neutralization -- Land of reasoning -- Act without words -- Possible experience -- Rare Earths -- Hope Mountain -- Harpes et luz."How far are we from the Lake District? How far from the garden? Eric Linsker's first book scrolls down the Anthropocene, tracking our passage through a technophilic pastoral where work and play are both forms of making others suffer in order to exist. In 'La far,' the world is faraway near, a hell conveniently elsewhere in which workers bundle Foxconn's 'rare earths' into the 'frosty kits' that return us our content, but also the sea meeting land as it always has. Both are singable conditions and lead, irreversibly, to odes equally comfortable with praise and lament."--Publisher's website.Iowa Poetry PrizeAmerican poetryPoetrylcgftAmerican poetry.821.008Linsker Eric1566767MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910787867603321La far3837614UNINA