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Half/Mask
84 pp.
$14.95 paper
BUY
THIS BOOK The University of Akron Press, 2007 |
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Delicate
Bait
Winner 2002 Akron Prize in
Poetry
Judge: Charles Simic, 96 pp.
$14.95 paper
BUY
THIS BOOK The University of Akron Press, 2003 |
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"We want a book—be it a work
of fiction or poetry—to remind us how varied and complex our
experience of the world can be at times. And yet when we
encounter such a book, we realize how rarely we come across one
that fits that description and how astonishing it is when we do.
Roger Mitchell's Delicate Bait is such a book. Not many poets
now writing have as wide a range as he does, both in terms of
subject matter and form. His poems are rich in detail, masterly
in execution, and always a good read. He is savvy about the way
we Americans live and try to make sense of our lives in this
moment in history."
—Charles Simic
Poem
Highlight: "Delicate Bait"
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Savage
Baggage
The Figures, 2001, Great Barrington, MA
66 pp.
$10.00 paper
BUY
THIS BOOK Small Press Distribution |
"The poems in this book are
full of sharp detail, words that seem like one-celled creatures
with a life of their own, keen wit, and observations on
"getting the soul arranged in space" that cut to the
chase. In these mostly short pieces, each tight as a fist and
clear as a windowpane, Mitchell redefines love and nature, in a
style that is a kind of meditative activism."
—Terence
Winch
Poem Highlight
"Things Light Finds To Be"
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Braid
The Figures,
1997, Great Barrington, MA
59 pp.
$10.00 paper
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Small Press Distribution |
"Clear-eyed and deliberate,
Mitchell has the gift of intimacy. He puts his voice right in
your ear. It is first a pleasure and soon an inspiration to read
a poem whose subject is
but most particularly
situations, human
for the most part,
recognizable, sliced off
the quivering, thick ham
of immediate being-in-the-world.
Braid is the sort of poem that
when you get to the end you begin again."
—William
Corbett
Poem Highlight
"Braid" (excerpt)
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The
Word for Everything
BkMk Press, 1996, Kansas City, MO
54 pp.
$10.95 paper
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BkMk Press |
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"Half dream, half wry, hard
bitten quite ordinary fact, Roger Mitchell's poems are
meditations in the freshest, most unextravagant sense. A
remembered trip by train through Europe, or a glance out the car
window while cutting through Indiana's endless fields—all things
are suddenly ancient and made to matter though the scale is
human, eye-level. It's this unsentimental goodness in the work
that most moves me. And how each poem turns and turns again,
making its way by slow surprise. This is a book to
treasure."
—Marianne Boruch
Poem Highlight "Four Hundredth Mile"
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Clear
Pond:
The Reconstruction of a Life
[non-fiction]
Winner of the 1990 John Ben Snow Award
230 pp.
$29.95 cloth
BUY
THIS BOOK Syracuse University Press, 1991 |
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"This is the story of poet Roger Mitchell's unique and
intriguing search through more than a century of historical
threads, looking for "a simple, singular man." The
ostensible subject of his inquiry, one Israel Johnson, was a
nineteenth-century pioneer settler who lived deep in the
Adirondack wilderness. Despite having developed patents for a
type of sawmill that remained in use well into the twentieth
century, which could have made him rich, Johnson was "no
one in particular," an everyman who died penniless, very
nearly lost in the mists of time."
—From the jacket copy
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Adirondack
BkMk Press, Kansas City, MO,1988; reissued in paper, 2003.
61 pp.
$12.95 paper
BUY
THIS BOOK BkMk Press |
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"This book has a great page
of epigraphs which help define the genre—a rendering into
poetry of the primary sources about an era/area. E.g.: "He
will tell you history and no lies," says Homer. "We
have failed to live up to our geography," says Theodore
Roethke. Mitchell gives us a history of the Adirondacks, with
the Indian languages, travelers' accounts, song and dances,
diaries, museum artifacts, and the poet's own deeply-rooted
personal experience. It is a book that scholars will respect,
poets will admire, and general readers who care about our wild
history will cherish."
—Marion K.
Stocking, Beloit Poetry Journal
Poem Highlight
"1898"
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A
Clear Space on a Cold Day
Cleveland State University Poetry
Center, 1986
80 pp.
$6.00 paper
BUY
THIS BOOK Cleveland State University Poetry
Center |
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"Roger Mitchell, like all
good writers is not one thing but is many: he is wise,
affectionate, rueful, judicious, eccentric. But above all he is
funny and he is tender, qualities that make his poetry
concentrically pleasurable. Whether he writes about Walt
Whitman, bus stations, Howard Johnson restaurants, or the little
ecstasies of family life, Roger Mitchell proves himself to be a
remarkable poet. That has never been so true as it is in A Clear
Space on a Cold Day."
—Dave Smith
Poem Highlight
"The Life I Am Living"
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Moving
New Rivers Press, 1976, New York
95 pp.
$5.00 paper
BUY THIS BOOK: "Moving" can be
obtained from the author at P.O. Box 457, Jay, NY 12941. |
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"This is a well-written book
of poetry by a poet of great skill and taste in language, who is
clearly in control of what he is doing. Two stanzas from 'Edges':
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On land I am flaky.
Bits of me
break against stone. The wind looks after
my
loosening hair. This falling
apart is my daily miracle.
Night
is alive in another place.
This is the time before time.
The waves are one continuous
roar, the wind is a single
breath, birds
the feathers of one body.
Light is a version of
sight, the heart stone.
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There are many passages and poems in this book that exhibit this
kind of clarity and this strong and authentic sense of the whole
of things."
—John M. Bennett, Small Press Review
Poem Highlight
"Ham and Eggs"
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Letters
From Siberia and Other Poems
Winner 1972 Midland Poetry
Award
New Rivers Press,
New York, 1971; reprinted 1974
79 pp.
$5.00 paper.
BUY THIS BOOK: This book can be
obtained from the author at P.O. Box 457, Jay, NY 12941. |
"Surely Roger Mitchell's book should find a place
among the best of contemporary writing."
—Milwaukee
Journal
Poem Highlight
"Walking in Cracow"
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