Architect
Architect
Summary
‘When he died, my brother became the architect of the rest of my life,’ writes Alison Thumel in Architect, which interweaves poems, lyric essays, and visual art to great emotional effect.
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Architect by Alison Thumel
“When he died, my brother became the architect of the rest of my life,” writes Alison Thumel in Architect, which interweaves poems, lyric essays, and visual art to great emotional effect. In this debut collection, the buildings of Frank Lloyd Wright become a blueprint for elegy, as Thumel overlays the language of architecture with the language of grief to raze and reconstruct memories, metaphors, and myths. With obsessive and exacting focus, the poet leads us through room after room in a search to answer whether it is possible to rebuild in the wake of loss. Meanwhile, the midwestern landscape beyond these rooms—the same landscape that infuses the low, horizontal forms of Wright’s Prairie Style buildings—shapes the figures in Architect as well as their fates: “For years after my brother’s death, I collected news articles on people who died young and tragically in landlocked states. Prairie Style deaths—boys sucked down into grain silos or swept up by tornadoes or fallen through a frozen pond. The boys I didn’t know, but the landscape I did. The dread of it. How many miles you can look ahead. For how long you see what is coming.”“’Inside a memory / is its ruin.’ So begins Thumel’s exquisitely crafted debut in which the poet fabricates an architecture for grief. In these spaces, metaphor is the only language for loss. ‘If this were myth I would already be transformed.’ This is the calling of poetry, to glean meaning from the ineffable no matter how shattering the results. Architect devastates even as it shines.”—Quan Barry, author of Auction
“Thumel has conjured up a structure like none other. A little miracle house made of words that, once seen, can never be forgotten, and once felt, never unfelt. With an almost otherworldly fearlessness, she shows us the shape loss leaves in a life and the words and forms that so beautifully and inadequately fill it.” —Jackson Holbert, author of Winter Stranger
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9781682262481 |
| ISBN 10 | 1682262480 |
| Title | Architect |
| Author | Alison Thumel |
| Series | Miller Williams Poetry Prize |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Paperback |
| Publisher | University of Arkansas Press |
| Year published | 2024-03-31 |
| Number of pages | 74 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |