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Watching for the Wingbeat

Watching for the Wingbeat

WATCHING FOR THE WINGBEAT includes work from Pat White’s earlier out-of-print titles; selections from ā€œGnossienneā€ (previously available only as a limited edition publication); ā€œFrom the Valdimar Notebooksā€, a recent unpublished sequence of 43 keen-eyed short-poem observations of the natural world; and eleven additional new poems.

Pat White’s 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 ā€œan 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: ā€œPainter, 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€

$2.02

Original: $5.76

-65%
Watching for the Wingbeat—

$5.76

$2.02
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Description

WATCHING FOR THE WINGBEAT includes work from Pat White’s earlier out-of-print titles; selections from ā€œGnossienneā€ (previously available only as a limited edition publication); ā€œFrom the Valdimar Notebooksā€, a recent unpublished sequence of 43 keen-eyed short-poem observations of the natural world; and eleven additional new poems.

Pat White’s 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 ā€œan 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: ā€œPainter, 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€

Watching for the Wingbeat | Petronella's Gallery and Bookstore