Texas Tech University Press
Menu


   

B O O K S

Second Wind

Click for larger image



1990. 96 pages.
0896722112
978-0-89672-211-8

$9.95 paper



Coming soon: online ordering! In the meantime, please call 800.832.4042 or 806.742.2982 to order.

Second Wind

By David Graham
Foreword by Alice Fulton

David Graham's poems are wonderfully subtle. They present a quiet, polite, plain spoken appearance to casual acquaintances; but friends with an ear to hear will soon sense that--beneath the calm surface--there stirs a much darker current, urgent and powerful, one engaged by an imagination that is ripe, wild, funny, and true. These poems embody that doubleness perfectly, the feeling that our world is at once reassuringly familiar and surpassingly strange. To self, to small town, to the dust-haunted reaches of memory and universe, Second Wind gives compassionate attention; and as David Graham, that keeper of "local faith," rightly says, "any act of attention / turns to love." --Michael McFee

During the first half of my life, I spent all of my summers in a small Pennsylvania town; and ever since then, it seems to me, I've been looking for a poet to give such a town a voice. It already exists in prose: Granville Hicks's marvelous portrait of Grafton, New York, Small Town. But no one I know of had caught in poetry the brutal, aimless, raw, public/private world of back-alley and choir-loft and school-yard violence; of swimming holes and attic trunks and neighbors' locked garages all aching to be touched and tested and tasted; of a place where almost everybody knows the secret vices and unexpected virtues of almost everybody else. Well, David Graham, whose work for the past half-dozen years has been a bright spot in the literary periodicals, at last with accurate speech gives us the American small town and its citizens not as they ought to be but as they are. --John Unterecker, Michigan Quarterly Review

In dense, richly textured language, David Graham draws on the ancient art of scop and minstrel, juggler, storyteller, and magician, to sing sagas of small towns, boyhood, domestic life, aging. Tough-minded and lyrical, and full of canny intelligence, all his taut tales ring true. --Ronald Wallace


Self Portrait with Nostalgia
Like a Television
The Mohawk River: A Real Allegory of Twenty Years of My Life as an Artist
Boys on Schedule
Self Portrait from D to G
Mother Pills
A Sense of Scale
Self-Portrait with Self-Doubt
Breaking and Entering
Companion of Dusk
Boys and Fireworks
Boys Gone Haywire
Boys Backward and Forward
The Attic Which Is Not Desire
Common Waters
Self-Portrait with Stage Fright
Self-Portrait with Australia
The Day I Cannot Stop Crying
Unguided Tour of Floyd, Virginia
Guided Tour of Pocahontas, Virginia
Near Misses
The Mind's Eye
Loons
Wedding Gift
Father of the Man
The Valley Where We Live
Why I Love Halloween
Self-Portrait as Author and Citizen
Letter from London
Kinds of Jazz
Planxty Beethoven
Farewell to Music: Turlough O'Carolan (1670-1738)
Planxty Beatles
Planxty Charles Ives
Planxty Lee Morgan
Sure
Rough Air
Moon Walk
Jesus Never Sleeps
The Fox, a Most Cat-like Dog
Self-Portrait as Lucky Man
What It Is Like
Hickory Fall
First Snow, Wisconsin
Second Wind
Dust Events




Home  |  Search  |  TTUP News  |  Books  |  Journals  |  About the Press  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy Policy  |  Site Map Texas Tech University logo


© 2006 Texas Tech University Press  |  2903 4th Street, Suite 201  |  Lubbock, TX 79409-1037  |  800.832.4042