Theophobia is the latest volume in Bruce Beasley's ongoing spiritual
meditation which forms a kind of postmodern devotional poetry in a
reinvention of the tradition of John Donne, George Herbert, Emily
Dickinson, Gerard Manley Hopkins, and T. S. Eliot. Theophobia is
structured around a series of poems called Pilgrim's Deviations and
forms a deviant and deviating pilgrimage through science, history,
politics, and popular culture. Beasley seeks the Biblical Kingdom of God
among Dolly the cloned sheep, the wonders and horrors of extremophilic
creatures living in astonishing intensities of temperature, robotic
phone operators, and Wikipedia's explanation of the mysteries of the
Holy Spirit.
Bruce Beasley is the author of six poetry collections, most recently
The Corpse Flower: New and Selected Poems (University of Washington
Press, 2007). He has won fellowships from the NEA and the Artist Trust
of Washington and three Pushcart Prizes.
Finalist for The Washington State Book Award
One of Poetry Northwest's Notable Books of 2014
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