Selections from Nancy Willard's acclaimed volumes of poetry and
prose
This diverse collection features some of Nancy Willard's most critically
lauded poetry--including works from her Newbery Medal-winning volume, A
Visit to William Blake's Inn--as well as her short fiction and four
unconventional essays on writing.
Hens, children, magic bottles, and the moon are just some of the
characters running through the luminous musings gathered here. "How to
Stuff a Pepper" becomes a heady discourse on the thoughts and sleeping
habits of peppers. "The Doctrine of the Leather-Stocking Jesus" and "The
Hucklebone of a Saint" are tales about the power of superstition to
shape our lives. Other stories showcase favorite Willard themes about
God, religion, and the magic and mysticism in everyday life--and the
ancestors, guardians, saints, and spirits who, in Willard's words, come
back "once in a while to keep an eye on us, the living."
A paean to the power of storytelling, A Nancy Willard Reader is an
essential volume for poetry and fiction lovers.