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The Moon Is Always Female: Poems (1980)

The Moon Is Always Female: Poems (1980)

Book Info

Author
Rating
4.2 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
0394738594 (ISBN13: 9780394738598)
Language
English
Publisher
knopf

About book The Moon Is Always Female: Poems (1980)

Marge Piercy is a phenomenal woman and writer. I can hardly take her novels they are so densely ladden with the minutiae and ordeals of daily living, but she knows what she's doing and does it as only she can, and god I admire her, even though she rarely writes the sort of novel I want to read. I like her best as poet. As poet of the female, she wows me, and infatuates and pains and angers and humors. This is my favorite Piercy collection.Here is the heart of fire in the cavesof the ancient body we are alignedwith the stars wheeling, the midges swarmingin the humid air like a nebula, with the clamswho drink the tide and the heartwood clockof the oak and the astronomical clockin the blood thundering through the great heartof the albatross. Our cells are burningeach a little furnace powered by the sunand the moon pulls the sea of our blood.

I am not usually a poetry reader but many of the poems in this book stopped me in my tracks. Marge Piercy knows how to get to the core of the matter and fully describes feelings and experiences I have had.Here is an excerpt from Morning Athletes"It is not the running I love, thumpthump with my leaden feet that onlyinfrequently are winged and prancing,but the light that glints off the cattailsas the wind furrows them, the rum cherriesreddening leaf and fruit, the way the pinesblacken the sunlight on their bristles,the hawk flapping three times, then floatinglow over beige grasses,and your companyas we trot, two friendly dogs leavingtracks in the sand. The geese callon the river wandering lost in sedgesand we talk and pant, pant and talkin the morning early and busy together."

Do You like book The Moon Is Always Female: Poems (1980)?

Marge Piercy is one of the poets I first came into contact with when reading The Norton Introduction to Literature when undoubtedly I should have been doing something else. (The poem was "To Have Without Holding.") I picked up The Moon is Always Female because of the many times my friend S/E has mentioned it as one of her favorites. It's the kind of collection that it's nice to leave out where you can pick it up and randomly re-read a poem or two when the mood strikes you. "For the young who want to" is one of my favorite poems (by any poet) and I never tire of re-reading it. The last stanza: "The real writer is one / who really writes. Talent / is an invention like phlogiston / after the fact of fire. / Work is its own cure. You have to / like it better than being loved."
—Theryn Fleming

I like the collection generally, but some of the poems in the book struck me as dated. I much preferred the selections in "Hand Games" to "The Lunar Cycle." If that makes me less a feminist, so be it. (Maybe it's just that I'm beyond menopause.) My favorite poetry is verse to which I return over and over. I'll keep this in the bookshelf, but it's not likely I'll return to it anytime soon. Some memorable snippets:"Every love has its season, its cultural artifacts...""I am on vacation ... from the fatty broth of my life.""I am my mother's daughter, a small woman of large longings. ... I am her only novel.""... trying to suck wine from that cold umbilicus."
—Marguerite

This book is the fucking best. I bought it in college as required reading for a course, but I go back to it every now and then when I need something comforting. The wonderful thing is, it's a great book for women (men too...but really women) who are 'alone' AND for women in love. If you're like me, you'll come away feeling like someone else GETS IT.Two of the best poems in the book:"To have without holding": http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~richie/po..."For strong women":http://www.pbs.org/wnet/foolingwithwo...
—Lynn Crothers

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