"Romantic-environmental poetry of a high order." --HUFFINGTON POST
This tour de force marks a breakthrough in Melissa Kwasny's poetic
investigation of a collective consciousness.
Drawing inspiration from Novalis (1772-1801), a poet who, like the other
adherents of early German Romanticism, believed in the correspondence
between inner and outer worlds, Kwasny divines the palpable and
ineffable ways in which inherited traditions--indigenous culture,
mythology, romanticism, modernism, surrealism, postmodernism, and
more--inform daily life.
Finding inspiration in the mountain West, Kwasny weaves a shimmering web
of connections. Throughout, details of lived experience emerge--hiking
through the Pacific Northwest, caring for an elder's
great-granddaughter, helping a friend deal with cancer, sorting through
the ruins of a relationship--and yet the interior voice is always tuned
to the physical world, envisioning the shared understanding that
connects all life.
Versatile in its forms and expressions, encyclopedic in its
comprehension, Reading Novalis in Montana is a virtuoso performance.