In Plena Vita - The Full Life: The Collected Poems (Working Lives, 14)

$10.07
by Timothy Russell

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Over 100 poems, 20 photos, timeline, and introduction by Marc Harshman "Timothy Russell's poetry alloys the grit of the Ohio Valley and the delicate brush strokes of Basho and Shiki, as only the white heat of a Weirton Steel blast furnace could do. Both lyric poet and "Mad Dog," Tim was and is the essential voice of the region while never being confined by its boundaries. Tim is a hidden master come into the light here. " -- Valerie Nieman, author of Leopard Lady: A Life in Verse The cumulative effect of reading Tim Russell's Collected Poems is simply staggering. No other poet sounds like Tim. He created a very distinct, recognizable voice apart from whatever was trending in the larger poetry world--humorous, precise, full of surprise and insight. Whether writing about the natural world or the human, Tim was always paying attention, seeing beneath the surfaces. This phenomenal collection brings renewed attention to his body of work and his contribution to American poetry. ~Jim Daniels, author of Gun/Shy: Poems In Plena Vita: The Full Life is aptly titled as it includes most of the poems Timothy Russell published in his life, along with remembrances by his wife and children and photographs of this extraordinary poet as husband, father, gardener, and steel mill worker. It is, indeed, a full life and the collected poems are now, as Russell writes in one poem, "in a safe place." This book is that place. Characterized by precise observation, careful attention, and both humor and tenderness, Russell's poems are absolutely original. The Latin titles he gave to most of his poems add a liturgical dimension to his work. Even the gritty mill poems have a sense of the holy within them. I am extremely grateful to have this book of poems and to know that new readers will discover a world here in a voice that is reliably intimate, spacious, and true. -Maggie Anderson, author of DEAR ALL That play between Nature and industry was unavoidable for me. That's the way my world appears. And if I'm just taking objective notes without any value judgment, then half of the things I write about are going to be industry, and roughly half are going to be natural, because that's what I see when I walk out the door. Yes, nature is a presence, a comfort…but the natural world in my mind is closer to my home. I mean that's where the poppies grow and that's where I see the orioles. I don't see them flying through the mill…so that's where the comfort of nature is; it's being home and comfortable and safe. And for that half of my life in the mill those natural things are rarely there…except maybe the deer walking on the mill island. There is discipline, spirit, no easy optimism, sensibility, heart in these poems. ~ Gary Snyder To read Adversaria is to be in the presence of a lively and supple and various mind, as tough as it is American. ~ Li Young Lee Russell, who works at Weirton Steel, knows how to pare language and image down to a crystal moment....The strength and straight-forwardness of these poems makes them some of the best statements on life not only in a steel mill but the small towns that surround it. ~ Marianna Hofer There is discipline, spirit, no easy optimism, sensibility, heart in these poems. ~Gary Snyder To read Adversaria is to be in the presence of a lively and supple and various mind, as tough as it is American. ~ Li Young Lee Russell, who works at Weirton Steel, knows how to pare language and image down to a crystal moment....The strength and straight-forwardness of these poems makes them some of the best statements on life not only in a steel mill but the small towns that surround it. ~Marianna Hofer Timothy Russell (1951-2021) was born and raised in the industrial Ohio Valley. He served in the military as a dog trainer in the early 1970s when he married Jodi (Dolan) Russell. He worked for 22 years at Weirton Steel Company as a millwright and boilermaker while attaining a BA at West Liberty State College and a Masters degree in creative writing from the University of Pittsburgh. He began writing in 1970s and published widely in literary presses, chapbooks, and in his award-winning Adversaria book in 1993. He and Jodi parented four children with eight grandchildren while living along the Ohio River in Toronto, Ohio. Despite his recurring and debilitating illnesses and being forced to retire, he wrote prolifically and achieved fame as a working-class, nature, and haiku poet. In Integrum I've put my white shirt on to celebrate my neighbor's glaring roof, the black chimney leaning against it all dissolving into brilliance. I've put my white shirt on to celebrate cookies on a plate downstairs and the pears and oranges in a bowl with one perfectly curved banana. I am celebrating the Christmas cactus blooming in March. I am celebrating nothing. I am celebrating today. I've put a white shirt on.  

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