Crazy Love: New Poems
by Pamela Uschuk
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Description
Through bold and innovative language, a strong female narrative explores the world and provides a voice for those who have been silenced in this empowering and inspirational collection of poetry. Examining a wide range of topics?love, spirituality, nature, and family?the poems give particular focus to politics, discussing how the actions of the government affect individuals on a daily basis. Filled with natural imagery and speckled with traces of the author's Russian, Swedish, and American show more heritage, this fresh compilation dares to take risks and ultimately offers hope and inspiration to people from all walks of life. show lessTags
Member Reviews
Words like beautiful, graceful, and enchanting seem so contrived when reviewing Pamela Uschuk's delightful collection of poetry, Crazy Love. Full of intoxicating imagery and dense with metaphor, this slim volume of poetry is a deceptively heavy read. Pamela Uschuk has incredible creativity with words, painting some of the most vivid pictures I've ever "seen" in poetry. I absolutely loved reading Crazy Love, and will definitely be spotlighting Uschuk next year in the poetry feature on my blog.
Pamela Uschuk uses melodious language in Crazy Love to drawn in her readers, sucking them into the depths of each poem and churning them in a tumbler. The collection is broken down into four sections and each appears to deal with a different aspect of love whether it’s the passion of “Crazy Love” or the eternal connection of love in “Hit and Run.”
From “The Horseman of the Cross and Vulnerable Word:” (page 3)
I was young and fell in love
with your wounds, your tongue,
half-song, half-glands,
strong as the Calvinist hands
that whacked and fed your swampy youth.
I was young and drank vermouth
while you fell to your knees
Beautifully, Uschuk demonstrates human love through bird and nature imagery, but she also draws parallels show more between the destructive nature of grasshoppers on crops to that of humans on the overall environment. There is a light and dark side to love and when love is too intense it can be destructive.
Read the full review: http://savvyverseandwit.com/2010/11/2010-green-books-campaign-crazy-love-by-pame... show less
From “The Horseman of the Cross and Vulnerable Word:” (page 3)
I was young and fell in love
with your wounds, your tongue,
half-song, half-glands,
strong as the Calvinist hands
that whacked and fed your swampy youth.
I was young and drank vermouth
while you fell to your knees
Beautifully, Uschuk demonstrates human love through bird and nature imagery, but she also draws parallels show more between the destructive nature of grasshoppers on crops to that of humans on the overall environment. There is a light and dark side to love and when love is too intense it can be destructive.
Read the full review: http://savvyverseandwit.com/2010/11/2010-green-books-campaign-crazy-love-by-pame... show less
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Author Information
Awards and Honors
Awards
Classifications
- Genres
- Poetry, Fiction and Literature, Music
- DDC/MDS
- 811.54 — Literature & rhetoric American literature in English American poetry in English 20th Century 1945-1999
- LCC
- HQ801 — Social sciences The family. Marriage, Women and Sexuality The Family. Marriage. Women The family. Marriage. Home Man-woman relationships. Courtship. Dating
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 9
- Popularity
- 2,295,530
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (4.50)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 2
- ASINs
- 1



