Shipley, in Academy of Hay, brings together two worlds often seen as divergent: the world of language, of poetics, of lyric poems blended seamlessly with the the world of farming. Throughout the book, Shipley crafts smart, intellectual poems that sing off the page, that /5(2). Julia Shipley is the author of The Academy of Hay ( avg rating, 10 ratings, 2 reviews, published ) and First Do No Harm ( avg rating, 2 ratin /5(3). · The Academy of Hay by Julia Shipley, Bona Fide Books, 75 pages. $ The first poem in Vermont writer Julia Shipley's new collection, The Academy of Hay, Author: Rachel Elizabeth Jones.
Julia Shipley Julia Shipley is the author of a full-length poetry collection, The Academy of Hay (Bona Fide Books, ), winner of the Melissa Lanitis Gregory Poetry Prize, and a long-form lyric essay, Adam's Mark, (Plowboy Press, ), which was selected as a Boston Globe Best New England Books of She is also the author of four poetry. Julia Shipley is an independent journalist and author of The Academy of Hay, winner of the Melissa Lanitis Gregory Poetry Prize and Adam's Mark, named a Best Book of by the The Boston Globe. Winner of the Ralph Nading Hill Award and two-time recipient of Vermont Arts Council and the Vermont Community Fund grants, she was also. Julia is an independent journalist, farminista, and micro-press publisher. She's the author of a full-length poetry collection, The Academy of Hay (Bona Fide Books, ), as well as Adam' s Mark: Writing from the Ox-House (Plowboy Press, ), a braided essay about farming and writing. Her website is writingonthefarm.
Poetry. Julia Shipley's luminous debut collection lingers in the liminal spaces where transition and connection occur. With intelligence and compassion, THE ACADEMY OF HAY DELIVERS a feminist response to our world straight from the earth. "synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title. Shipley, in Academy of Hay, brings together two worlds often seen as divergent: the world of language, of poetics, of lyric poems blended seamlessly with the the world of farming. Throughout the book, Shipley crafts smart, intellectual poems that sing off the page, that rise with idea, that are heavy and rich with image. The Academy of Hay by Julia Shipley. The farmer squats in the dirt road beside the tractor. Using a twig he draws a way to enter the field. For the next two hours I’ll drive twenty-five miles, mowing circles within circles. On the pond I’d watch ripples erupt and vanish, thinking: fish postulants. Sister Bernard Mary once told me, a journey.
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