These poems record the partly predictable, partly random representative
days in a year that inspire wonder at their swiftness. Seasonal
time is reflected in the changing angle of sunlight, and familial
time is marked by birthdays and holiday celebrations. Public
events take on both a sense of history and a sense of unreality
in the bright glare of media attention and shiny celebrity surfaces.
All the various time-orders in which we live overlay one another:
a red leaf adrift in a stream is emblematic of autumn's recurrence;
after years of marriage, a couple's wedding suddenly seems very
close. Spurred by the sensation of accelerating days at the
turn of the new millennium, James Applewhite explores the interplay
of immediate experience and lasting memory, of continuity and
change, over time-that elusive, ineffable, yet crucial medium
of self-definition and of understanding the cosmos.
James Applewhite is the author of twelve books of poems,
including Selected Poems and Quartet for Three Voices. Among
the many honors he has received are the North Carolina Award
in Literature, the Roanoke-Chowan Award, the Jean Stein Award
of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and election
to the Fellowship of Southern Writers. The recipient of a
Guggenheim Fellowship, he has been cited in Harold Bloom's
Western Canon and is featured in both V. S. Naipaul's A
Turn in the South and Will Blythe's To Hate Like This
Is to Be Happy Forever. He lives in his native North Carolina,
where he is a professor of English at Duke University.
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