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The Father is a sequence of poems, a daughter's vision of a father's illness and death. It chronicles these events in a connected narrative, from the onset of the illness to reflections in the years after the death. The book is, most of all, a series of acts of understanding. The poems are impelled by a passion to know and a freedom to follow wherever the truth may seem to lead. The book goes into areas of feeling and experience rarely entered in poetry. The ebullient language, the startling, far-reaching images, the sense of extraordinary connectedness seize us immediately. Sharon Olds transforms a harsh reality with truthfulness, with beauty, with humor--and without bitterness.
The deep pain in The Father arises from a death, and from understanding a life. But there is joy as well. In the end, we discover we have been reading not a grim accounting but an inspiriting tragedy, transcending the personal. The radiance and daring that have always distinguished Sharon Olds' work find here their most powerful expression.
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Previews available in: English
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Book Details
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"This is a Borzoi book"
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First Sentence
"No matter how early I would get up and come out of the guest room, and look down the hall, there between the wings of the wing-back chair my father would be sitting, his head calm and dark between the wings."
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History
- Created October 20, 2008
- 5 revisions
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| August 18, 2010 | Edited by IdentifierBot | added LibraryThing ID |
| April 16, 2010 | Edited by bgimpertBot | Added goodreads ID. |
| December 7, 2009 | Edited by WorkBot | add to work |
| April 21, 2009 | Edited by ImportBot | add OCLC number |
| October 20, 2008 | Created by ImportBot | initial import |
