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I have tasted the appleI have tasted the apple

I have tasted the apple1996

Mary Crow

About this book

There is a wild vulnerability in the poetry of Mary Crow that allows her to be both passionate and horrified. In I Have Tasted The Apple, Crow tells of her experience traveling through South America, Eastern Europe and the Middle East, territories marked by political upheaval and social unrest. Crow's poems speak to the danger of a middle-aged woman traveling alone and to the dilemma of choosing flight or bearing witness. She writes in "About Women" - "He reaches out and breaks the wishbone: .../Behind him his shadow/ is growing floppy and fat, blurred/ In a minute, he will lick my hand." Crow's poetry challenges us to resist becoming anesthetized to violence and suffering, and affirms that the human spirit can overcome adversity.

Details

First published
1996
OL Work ID
OL3009933W

Subjects

American poetryPoetry (poetic works by one author)

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Open Library
Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.