Hawk Parable
ISBN: 9781629221069
Platform/Publisher: Project MUSE / The University of Akron Press
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Chapters; Download: Chapters
Subjects: Nuclear warfare; Nuclear weapons; Atomic bomb;

In his 1950 Nobel Prize acceptance speech, Faulkner argued that under the sway of a "universal and physical fear," writers had forgotten how to attend to "the problems of the human heart in conflict with itself." In her second book, Mills (Tongue Lyre) proves that Faulkner underestimated a poet's ability to manage enormous shifts of scale. Questions probe and pierce: "Can I call it light/ knowing what came?" Mills unlooses documentary evidence of bomb testing, deployment, and devastation that intersect with moments of acute self-reckoning: "So I kissed a goat on the mouth. I was warned./ I looked too fast into its eyes, both/ black stitches." Haunted by the unverified possibility of her fighter-pilot grandfather's "involvement in the Nagasaki mission," Mills scans skies for contrails, scrutinizes negatives, reads survivors' accounts, and sifts through white sands: "I swallow vomit after watching// the island wart into an orange bulb," but "Gone is the oyster-/ white rocket. You can't/ take it back." The poet asks: "Did the garble/ protect this body from history?" Her answer: "The land buries the thing we made to live/ just beyond the imagination." Here, Mills has written a book for the long nuclear century. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Tyler Mills is the author of two books of poems, Hawk Parable (winner of the 2017 Akron Poetry Prize) and Tongue Lyre (winner of the 2011 Crab Orchard Series in Poetry First Book Award). Her poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The Guardian, and Poetry, and her essays have appeared in AGNI, Copper Nickel, and The Rumpus. The recipient of residencies from Yaddo, Ragdale, and the Vermont Studio Center, and scholarships/fellowships from Bread Loaf and Sewanee, the Chicago native is an assistant professor at New Mexico Highlands University, editor-in-chief of The Account, and a resident of Santa Fe, NM.
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