Texas Tech University Press
2005 Poet's Prize * 2005 Los Angeles Times Book Award Finalist * Booklist Editor's Choice 2004
Menu


   

 

B O O K S

Keeping My Name

Click for larger image



04/2006. xii, 79 pages.
0896725758
978-0-89672-575-1

$14.95 paper

Walt McDonald First-Book Series in Poetry

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

Keeping My Name

By Catherine Tufariello

2005 Poets' Prize * Los Angeles Times Book Prize Finalist * Booklist Editors' Choice 2004

“For formalists, this author comes as a gift, a poet fully in charge of her forms, subtle and controlled. She embraces the villanele, Petrarchan and Shakespearean sonnets, the measured quatrain, rhymed couplets. . . . What excites the reader is watching Tufariello use the limits of these traditions to stretch her creativity.”—ForeWord. “In immaculate, subtly musical meter and rhyme, Tufariello conjures scenes of the city, modern history, marriage and family, love in the Italian Renaissance, and the women of the Bible that fully engage the mind and the heart.”—Booklist.

“Tufariello ranges widely in form and subject, all with such aplomb that no less an expert than Richard Wilbur praises her ‘plain, supple eloquence’ and ‘easy command of rhyme, measure, and form.’ . . . Resourcefulness and restraint are rare qualities in contemporary poetry. . . . Tufariello’s poems provide such eloquent examples that I feel no need to explain further.”—R. S. Gwynn, The Hudson Review.

With a distinctive blend of craft and deep feeling, clarity and subtle thought, Catherine Tufariello gives new resonance to the historical and mythic past by drawing larger significance and universal themes from contemporary life.

Catherine Tufariello has taught literature and writing courses at Cornell, The College of Charleston, and the University of Miami. Her poems and translations have appeared in numerous journals, including Poetry and The Hudson Review.

From “The Walrus at Coney Island”:

All watchers gasp together as he dives,
The clumsy fore fins clever now as knives,
The dark head bobbing in the dazzling spray
Of sun-shot water, like a child’s at play.
So this is what he is, has always been--
A gleaming, sleekly muscled submarine,
Lithe as a dancer, roguish as a boy,
Corkscrewing downward with what looks like joy.


Free Time
February 18, 1943
Elegy for Alice
Dana Dancing
The Walrus at Coney Island
Epitaph for a Stray
Crossed Wires
Chemist's Daughter
Moving Day
Two Trees
Snow Angel
Insomnia
Seasons of the Moon
The Mirror
Ghost Children
The Worst of It
Pentimento
Plot Summary
Keeping My Name
Cavalcanti's Belta di donna e di saccente core
Guinizelli's Al cor gentil ripara sempre Amore
S' amor non e, che dunque e quel ch' io sento?
Se la mia vita da l'aspro tormento
I di miei piu leggier che nesun cervo
Or ai fatto l' estremo di tua possa
Ite, rime dolenti, al duro sasso
Lorenzo Lotto's Annunciation
A Proposal in the Cleveland Museum, Winter 2000
No Angel
Rebekah I
Rebekah II
Mary Magdalene
The Feast of Tabernacles
Zero at the Bone
The Waiting Room
Ultrasound
Fruitless
Useful Advice
In Glass
After All
Florida's Flowers
First Contact
The Dream of Extra Room
Twenty Weeks
This Child
Useful Advice, the Sequel
Liana's Song
First Sight




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