
Thousands
Poetry byĀ Lightsey Darst
November 14, 2017 ⢠6 x 9 ⢠96 pages ⢠978-1-56689-492-0
Passages in life that have felt forbidden, overwritten, underwritten, silenced are given voice in Darstās precise, rich, confessional poems.
From Thousands:Ā
Snow as metaphor for everything
lower than the predicted low
in this my last February of loving you
here (a rhyme begun in one
poem may be landed in a later one).
About the Author
Lightsey Darst lives and works in North Carolina.
Thanks to a 2013 ADA Access Improvement Grant administered by VSA Minnesota for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, this title is also formatted for screen readers which make text accessible to the blind and visually impaired. To purchase this title for use with a screen reader please email us atĀ [email protected].
Reviews
Ā
Bustle, āThe 18 Best Poetry Collections of 2018ā
āFor Darst, to remember is to claim ownership of oneās pain and, by extension, oneās humanity.āĀ āPublishers Weekly
āOne of the [Thousands'] strengths is how Darst weaves quotations, dates, and places into her work, making attributions in the margins. It allows the reader to feel both intimately involved as an observer, but also, somehow, present. . . . This is a collection in which all readers will recognize something, if in nothing else then in the humanity of the poet herself.āĀ āThe Paris Review
āDarstās intimacy here is masterful: whether it is love, lust, pregnancy, or words.āĀ āThe Millions
ā[Thousands] has an intimacy about it that speaks to the tenderness inside the reader. . . . Donāt be surprised if thereās a catch in your throat when you read." āSignature Reads
āAs they carve their way through this markedly contemporary landscape, Darstās readers will likely have trouble separating the dreams, desires, and fears the speaker expresses from their ownāthe text of these poems is everything you might catch yourself thinking, and everything you might hope someone else could share with you.āĀ āThe Arkansas International
āDear fear, dear darkness, dear misunderstandings, dear life, dear lost-in-myself, I am no longer afraid of you. Now I have this book. I have Lightsey Darstās amazing and ecstatic meditation on being a person in the world, I have these poems to guide me, I have her bravery and wild mind, I have her spells and wisdom, I have these incredible poems to carry with me wherever I go.ā āMatthew Dickman
āLightsey Darstās ability to find astonishment within and withoutāto lift the story of many varied days inside a set of years inside and outside of a marriage, a love affair, and a pregnancyāuntil it sings with revelation, drew me intoĀ Thousands immediately and never let go. Thrillingly unafraid to state what women are often dismissed for stating, Darst elevates language into something so wholly artful that neither the poems nor the grit can be denied. InĀ Thousands,Ā Darst takes longing and ecstasy and melancholy and doubt back from the patriarchy to write toward the canon of the future.āĀ āLynn Melnick
āThousands is an unabashed and compelling collection of poetry. . . . The poems are unafraid to remark upon the world as it is, to touch on areas of womanhood that are often overlooked, including sex and yearning and the interior of a marriage falling apart.ā āThe Corresponder
āSimultaneously vulnerable and self-assured, Darstās verse will have you clamoring for everything sheās ever written.ā āBustle
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Description
Poetry byĀ Lightsey Darst
November 14, 2017 ⢠6 x 9 ⢠96 pages ⢠978-1-56689-492-0
Passages in life that have felt forbidden, overwritten, underwritten, silenced are given voice in Darstās precise, rich, confessional poems.
From Thousands:Ā
Snow as metaphor for everything
lower than the predicted low
in this my last February of loving you
here (a rhyme begun in one
poem may be landed in a later one).
About the Author
Lightsey Darst lives and works in North Carolina.
Thanks to a 2013 ADA Access Improvement Grant administered by VSA Minnesota for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, this title is also formatted for screen readers which make text accessible to the blind and visually impaired. To purchase this title for use with a screen reader please email us atĀ [email protected].
Reviews
Ā
Bustle, āThe 18 Best Poetry Collections of 2018ā
āFor Darst, to remember is to claim ownership of oneās pain and, by extension, oneās humanity.āĀ āPublishers Weekly
āOne of the [Thousands'] strengths is how Darst weaves quotations, dates, and places into her work, making attributions in the margins. It allows the reader to feel both intimately involved as an observer, but also, somehow, present. . . . This is a collection in which all readers will recognize something, if in nothing else then in the humanity of the poet herself.āĀ āThe Paris Review
āDarstās intimacy here is masterful: whether it is love, lust, pregnancy, or words.āĀ āThe Millions
ā[Thousands] has an intimacy about it that speaks to the tenderness inside the reader. . . . Donāt be surprised if thereās a catch in your throat when you read." āSignature Reads
āAs they carve their way through this markedly contemporary landscape, Darstās readers will likely have trouble separating the dreams, desires, and fears the speaker expresses from their ownāthe text of these poems is everything you might catch yourself thinking, and everything you might hope someone else could share with you.āĀ āThe Arkansas International
āDear fear, dear darkness, dear misunderstandings, dear life, dear lost-in-myself, I am no longer afraid of you. Now I have this book. I have Lightsey Darstās amazing and ecstatic meditation on being a person in the world, I have these poems to guide me, I have her bravery and wild mind, I have her spells and wisdom, I have these incredible poems to carry with me wherever I go.ā āMatthew Dickman
āLightsey Darstās ability to find astonishment within and withoutāto lift the story of many varied days inside a set of years inside and outside of a marriage, a love affair, and a pregnancyāuntil it sings with revelation, drew me intoĀ Thousands immediately and never let go. Thrillingly unafraid to state what women are often dismissed for stating, Darst elevates language into something so wholly artful that neither the poems nor the grit can be denied. InĀ Thousands,Ā Darst takes longing and ecstasy and melancholy and doubt back from the patriarchy to write toward the canon of the future.āĀ āLynn Melnick
āThousands is an unabashed and compelling collection of poetry. . . . The poems are unafraid to remark upon the world as it is, to touch on areas of womanhood that are often overlooked, including sex and yearning and the interior of a marriage falling apart.ā āThe Corresponder
āSimultaneously vulnerable and self-assured, Darstās verse will have you clamoring for everything sheās ever written.ā āBustle











