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SKU: 11974165436

The World as We Know It Is Falling Away: New Poems by Jane Greer

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The World as We Know It Is Falling Away: New Poems by Jane GreerThe clenched intensity of some of these poems recalls Gerard Manley Hopkins, if we imagine Hopkins as a woman remembering the golden days of her Midwestern girlhood. Offering prayer, praise, elegy, spiritual struggle, and short hymn like pieces, Jane Greers work eloquently reminds us of the range and power of devotional lyric. Rachel Hadas, author, Love and Dread and Piece by Piece Jane Greer is one of our most quietly surprising poets, and The World

“The clenched intensity of some of these poems recalls Gerard Manley Hopkins, if we imagine Hopkins as a woman remembering the golden days of her Midwestern girlhood. Offering prayer, praise, elegy, spiritual struggle, and short hymn-like pieces, Jane Greer’s work eloquently reminds us of the range and power of devotional lyric.”

—Rachel Hadas, author, Love and Dread and Piece by Piece

“Jane Greer is one of our most quietly surprising poets, and The World as We Know It Is Falling Away is a volume of everyday, startling beauty.”

—Micah Mattix, poetry editor, First Things

Jane Greer writes poems of astonishing strength and delicacy. Ordinary joys are voiced in extraordinary language that is both crystal-clear and powerfully metaphorical. In poems whose mastery of craft is evident but never intrusive, Greer dazzles in a range of meters and forms; light breaks, darkness falls, but faith is never far away, as seen in “Catherine of Siena to Her Confessor,” a fine ghazal whose canonized medieval protagonist vigorously professes her belief: “It is the bridge of the Word, the bridge of his body,/that I climb, panting. I cling to the bridge of his body.” The World as We Know It Is Falling Away, Greer acknowledges, but in poems that are, by turns, archly stated and deeply felt, things invisible offer a grace that’s far more lasting.”

—Ned Balbo, author, The Cylburn Touch-Me-Nots and 3 Nights of the Perseids

“In the luminous lexicon of Jane Greer’s wise and tender third collection, “loss and bliss come from the same root.” Time and again, with practiced hand, the poet derives one from the other. The root these two share, of course, is life itself, the “solid facts” of which are “pestilence, fear, and war,” yet, no less solidly, “perfect figs” laid out for a loved one — life, which seems to go too soon yet proves as lasting as a stubborn creeper, its new shoots braiding “into a wild cascade.” A graceful sense of wholeness pervades these poems, as thick and honeyed as the light of a summer forever fading, forever fixed in the mind.”

—Boris Dralyuk, author, My Hollywood and Other Poems and editor, the Los Angeles Review of Books

“Jane Greer’s Twitter handle, @NorthDakotaJane, sounds like the moniker of a frontier outlaw. So it should. I can see her face on a wanted poster. At a time when most poets and critics abhor “traditional” forms, she is a master of the ancient art. At a time when “religion” is equated with small-mindedness and intolerance, she brazenly sings an “Eschaton Song.” Long may she ride.”

—John Wilson, editor, Books & Culture (1995-2016)

“I am grateful for another book from such a talented poet who only returned to writing late in life. Greer has a knack for direct statement and a gift for natural and unforced rhyme, but, more than that, she reminds me of Augustine as a great dramatist of the inner religious life. She has studied long the swervings of the human heart and just might be the best living devotional poet in America.”

—Burl Horniachek, editor, To Heaven’s Rim: The Kingdom Poets Book of World Christian Poetry, Beginnings to 1800

“In Jane Greer’s new collection of poems, graces abound at every turn. Her voice is at once a fresh and frank friend from the prairie and an echo of Donne, Eliot, and Hopkins. There’s a playfulness that doesn’t so much mask the spiritual depth as make it approachable and earthy while always pointing us beyond the world that is, after all, falling away. A delight from start to finish, and will certainly reward returning.”

—Fr. Bill Dailey, CSC, founding director, Notre Dame-Newman Centre for Faith & Reason, Dublin, Ireland

“The best way to describe Jane Greer’s poems in The World as We Know It Is Falling Away is to say that they’re faithful. They’re full of a faith that lets the drama and humor of family life sidle up next to the lives of the saints. And they’re filled with faithfulness to all sorts of high truths, even to truths that are in contradiction: the truth that human beings struggle to be good; the truth that memories of our past lives are sometimes dreamingly lovely and some- times make us cringe; the truth that the world is full of ecstatic beauty and that its falling away is not a bad thing. Above all, they’re faithful to poetry’s roots in song and incantation and charm.”

—Maryann Corbett, author, In Code

“Jane Greer’s latest book of poems delights as it edifies, and edifies as it delights. Greer sees the world as it is—passing away—and sees beyond it, without any of the tragic cynicism that attempts to see through it. This collection is a remarkable poetic achievement, and I heartily recommend it.”

—Christopher R. Altieri, contributing editor, Catholic World Report

“The poems in Jane Greer’s distilled and potent collection display both clarity of thought and precision in formal control, without sacrificing a sense of mystery, the acknowledgment that a Word exists beyond the bounds of human language. Often striking in their brevity, these poems drop onto the silent page “like so much gravel,” like prayers dropping to the ground and resonating there, “kadosh, kadosh, kadosh.” Like the seventeenth-century metaphysical poets, Greer takes the paradigms and paradoxes of the spiritual life as her poetic preoccupation, but she is also a poet of place, drawing on the landscape of her native North Dakota, and a poet of human experience in all its ecstasy, trespass, and loss. These poems, though sharp and bracing as the “bright and brittle air” of a Plains winter, are radiant nevertheless with the vision of a transcendent “golden hour.”

—Sally Thomas, author, Motherland

“Loss and bliss come from the same root”: the wisdom contained in this line informs every poem in this absorbing new collection by Jane Greer, whose Catholic faith is pervasive but never taken for granted. Whether her dexterously crafted poems are evoking Edenic “light as thick as clover honey” or the bitterness of loss and personal disappointment, their subject matter is searching and earned. Greer uses rhyme, meter, and other techniques with a light touch adapted to the context. She composes phrases and sounds that are poignant, playful, and a pleasure to roll around on the tongue and ponder in the heart.

—Andrew Frisardi, author, The Harvest and the Lamp and Ancient Salt: Essays on Poets, Poetry, and the Modern World

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mehva
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 3
3.5
Format: Hardcover
This is a smart book, an interesting book but it was hard for me to read as the style was more technical/detached than i like. It worked for the story but not for the kind of reader I am. It is worth the read though despite this 3.5
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Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2024
F
FryLady
New York, US
★★★★★ 4
Very creative and engaging
Format: Hardcover
Kinda blown away that this is a first novel! In a not-so-distant future, the protagonist Lee is a recent grad of an elite Program where she has dedicated her life to achievement. She's disappointed to be sent to a no-name company and assigned to a mysterious project. Learning she must gather data to help AI become more human, it's sadly funny as the only way she knows to gather data is by going online. I really loved the book's portrayal of the future, in which NYC is a dead city and the Midwest is where all the action is. The future portrayed here is just a tad more digitized than our current time. Instead of cooking people order food and it is delivered instantly (not just meals, but like if you want a cookie it's delivered instantly), purchase clothing by tapping the glass display windows at empty stores, and eat at restaurants by tapping on screens and having food shot out at them by machines. When Lee discovers a "primitive" restaurant that is actually staffed by humans and has menus, she is drawn to the place over and over again and starts to discover the magic of real life interaction. Lee, who is socially awkward to the point of agony, gradually becomes comfortable interacting with humans IRL. It's touching and funny as she navigates things like friendship, getting drinks or coffee and even dating. But the book takes a dark turn as Lee's drive for perfection and her assignment to "experience life" for the AI spin out of control. This book started off reminding me of "The Factory" by Hiroko Amayada and turned into shades of "The Rosie Project". Touching and truly original, well worth reading!
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Reviewed in the United States on August 16, 2024
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hd
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
Great read!
Format: Hardcover
I can’t believe this is a debut novel for this author! "Loneliness and Company" is a moving story of human connection. Through her storytelling, Dyroff delves into the transformative power of genuine relationships. This book serves as a poignant reminder of the significance of meaningful connections in our lives. With its wonderfully crafted characters and thought-provoking themes, "Loneliness and Company" is a must-read!
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Reviewed in the United States on May 14, 2024
M
Mal G
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 4
Poignant
Format: Hardcover
This is definitely a slow burn. A poignant look at the idea of loneliness, though I often think about how the technology presented in near future worlds make people feel less tangibly human.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 12, 2024
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Wendi Hill
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
Awesome Read
Format: Hardcover
Loneliness and Company was a wonderful read. it opened up a new perspective and had me venturing into a world of AI, longing, love and a future of hope in a world with so much digital and technology in our every day lives. I will keep an eye out for future books from this author.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 14, 2024

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