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Dear Specimen by W.J. Herbert
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Dear Specimen

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Dear Specimen by W.J. Herbert
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Oct 05, 2021 | ISBN 9780807007594

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    Oct 05, 2021 | ISBN 9780807007594

    Buy from Other Retailers:

  • Oct 05, 2021 | ISBN 9780807007600

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Product Details

Praise

“Herbert writes movingly about a world of extinction, using the lenses of fossils and storytelling to create an involving worldview. . . . The writer’s gift for deep seeing elevates even the smallest of details. . . . In mostly short poems, Herbert describes a vibrant yet highly vulnerable world. . . . She breathes life into fossils, skeletons, and nature today, even our world in its current damaged state. A unique and thrilling collection that pulses with wonder; not to be missed.”
Library Journal

“[Dear Specimen] is as unflinching as it is gentle.”
Tupelo Quarterly

“These poems examine the beauty and cruelty that abound in nature, and they scintillate with the spark of life while acknowledging its inevitable extinction.”
Earth Island Journal

“These poems engage the most critical question humans have ever faced—and do it from the wellsprings of passion and grace that are the best thing about our species.”
—Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature

“Few cultural achievements are as gratifying to witness as, in W. J. Herbert’s Dear Specimen, a true, patient, and devoted practitioner of the craft of poetry vaulting into mastery, into the sort of inspired brilliance all poets long for, at least once in their lives. Flawlessly weaving together themes of personal tragedy and ecological crisis, Herbert says of the trilobite, in the context of deep drilling in the Permian Basin, ‘If we raise you, / no one can save us.’ Despite what Auden said of the practical utility of poetry, in these days of environmental lunacy, Dear Specimen is not only a welcome book but a necessary one.”
—B. H. Fairchild, author of The Blue Buick: New and Selected Poems

“No other way to say this: after reading Dear Specimen, I was stricken. I felt like my heart was breaking, because it was. But I also know this: if there is any consolation to be found in the acknowledgement of humanity’s crimes against the planet, such consolation will come to us through art like that of W. J. Herbert. Yes, the book will break your heart, because it beautifully, eloquently, and artfully enacts our common responsibility in the loss of the thing we all share and depend upon, the single thing no one can live without—our mother, Earth.”
—Robert Wrigley, author of Nemerov’s Door

“The persona who inspires W. J. Herbert’s debut volume, Dear Specimen, maintains a brave and plaintive voice as she records the signs of a dying planet and simultaneously faces her own imminent demise. Quietly fierce, her poems interweave personal loss with the decline of species diversity—yet they also reflect hope, awe, and a poignant yearning for human redemption. Not only a brilliant meditation on the ephemeral nature of mortality, Dear Specimen is also a soulful lament conveying a stark message: we, too, face extinction if we don’t act now to save Mother Earth. This tender and alarming volume may well be the most important book that you’ll read this year.”
—Maurya Simon, author of The Wilderness: New & Selected Poems

Table Of Contents

Foreword by Kwame Dawes

I

A Homo Sapiens on the Brink of Extinction Speaks to the Fossil Mosasaurus
Lyuba
Speak to Me
After a Miscarriage, My Daughter Asks
Millipede
Aerial View
Least Tern
Seamless Bead
Embryonic Daughter
Fragile Eagle

II

Mounting the Dove Box
Resin Specimen
Dark Season
Dusky and Zigzag Salamanders
The Seer
Nautiloid
After My Diagnosis, Sarah Asks
Water Scorpion, Magnified 40x
Waterfowl, Dovekie
White-Tail

III

Celestial Mechanics
American Beaver
After His Nightmare, Sarah Asks
Fledgling
Speciesism
Squander
Tipping Point
Errant Eagle
Put Bones in Pit When Finished
If Oil Rigs Raise You Like Lazarus from the Shale of the Permian Basin

IV

Abnormal Echo
Before the Bonfire
Bridge Constructs in Modern Technology
Cardinal, You Would Not Believe
Hybrid
A Pastoral Topography
Riddles of Flock & Bone
Homo Sapiens
In the End, Sarah Asks
Shanidar, First Flower People

V

The Smell of Almost Rain
Sea Lily
At the Museum of Permian Extinctions
Triage
American Copperhead
After My Burial, Sarah Asks
Dear Specimen
Day Shift/Night Shift
At the Sea Floor Exploration Exhibit, Sarah Asks
Epilogue: To a Trilobite

Acknowledgments

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