In this ever-timely collection of more than fifty poems and paintings
divided into eight sections, one of America's most distinguished poets
and anthologists, Lee Bennett Hopkins, and internationally acclaimed
painter and printmaker Stephen Alcorn trace emotions of warfare from the
American Revolution to the Iraq War.
Warfare has taken -- continues to take -- a tremendous toll on every
man, woman, and child in our society as war weaves itself into the
fabric of our shared past, present, and future. Raw emotions and results
of warfare are expressed here through voices of beloved poets such as
Langston Hughes, Carl Sandburg, Walt Whitman, Denise Levertov, and e. e.
cummings -- and are movingly combined with voices of newer poets,
including several soldiers who had courage to write poetry from front
lines.
America at War exposes effects of war through hearts of poets and eyes
of the artist, paying fitting tribute to those who have served, those
now serving, and those who have given their lives so we all may live in
peace.