Watching for the Wingbeat
WATCHING FOR THE WINGBEAT includes work from Pat Whiteās earlier out-of-print titles; selections from āGnossienneā (previously available only as a limited edition publication); āFrom the Valdimar Notebooksā, a recent unpublished sequence of 43 keen-eyed short-poem observations of the natural world; and eleven additional new poems.
Pat Whiteās poetry embraces the environment, history and time, and celebrates the rhythms that govern rural life with a sense of the transcendental rare in contemporary New Zealand writing. He writes about living in South Canterbury, the Wairarapa, and on the West Coast, with āan ease about being there, whether it is reflecting on the effects of drought, the mist rising off a dam, or listening to the stars.ā (John Horrocks) Reviewing How the Land Lies: Of Longing and Belonging in the NZ Listener, Jeffrey Paparoa Holman wrote: āPainter, poet, genealogist, biographer, and now memoirist: White is a jack-of-all-trades and masters many. He pays his debts to [Peter] Hooper, Gary Snyder and a host of others, in the process becoming our own accessible, contemporary Henry David Thoreau.ā
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Description
WATCHING FOR THE WINGBEAT includes work from Pat Whiteās earlier out-of-print titles; selections from āGnossienneā (previously available only as a limited edition publication); āFrom the Valdimar Notebooksā, a recent unpublished sequence of 43 keen-eyed short-poem observations of the natural world; and eleven additional new poems.
Pat Whiteās poetry embraces the environment, history and time, and celebrates the rhythms that govern rural life with a sense of the transcendental rare in contemporary New Zealand writing. He writes about living in South Canterbury, the Wairarapa, and on the West Coast, with āan ease about being there, whether it is reflecting on the effects of drought, the mist rising off a dam, or listening to the stars.ā (John Horrocks) Reviewing How the Land Lies: Of Longing and Belonging in the NZ Listener, Jeffrey Paparoa Holman wrote: āPainter, poet, genealogist, biographer, and now memoirist: White is a jack-of-all-trades and masters many. He pays his debts to [Peter] Hooper, Gary Snyder and a host of others, in the process becoming our own accessible, contemporary Henry David Thoreau.ā











