Mountains and the Sea To pay by check please use this order form. We are pleased to take orders from retailers. Email us with details about your order or call us at 207-837-5760. In an age of the displacement of writing—by artificial intelligence, social media, and the digitization of culture—Brian Glaser meditates in Mountains and The Sea on the vitality of the life of writing as he experiences it in his sixth decade on the planet, thinking in ways philosophical at times and lightly playful at others, always with a love for the written word and its surprises. POETRY / General ISBN: 978-1-962082-80-8 (print; softcover; perfect bound) Released August 5, 2025 | Copyright 2025 88 pages |
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Brian Glaser is the author of six books of poetry and many essays on poetry and poetics. He lives in Santa Ana, California, and teaches art and history at Chapman University. sites.chapman.edu/bglaser |
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“Brian Glaser is a spiritual seeker, which involves continually testing wisdom from several spiritual traditions. But the major emphasis is on an effort to produce as absolute a clarity as possible about elemental features of his life—natural, personal, familial, social, and political. Innocence becomes as fundamental as air; desire as fundamental as water. So poetry itself has to renounce metaphor and elaborate form in order to hew as closely as possible to honest renderings of surprising moments where the shadows lift and the mind responds to something worth enduring. These moments seem utterly bare. The poetry resides in the resonance of what comes to matter as it just comes into language, often weaving sites of contradiction that also serve as means of recognizing how intractably solitude, social pressure, and familial ties serve to foster one another. Poetry becomes a process of imagination ceaselessly adjusting to shifts in possibilities of responsiveness. And the moral life becomes inseparable from fostering careful attention to what creates and binds our passions.” “. . . evokes things like Frost and Whitman, seeing something haunting in nature, but probably more like Frost because the human element is so present and nostalgic, the way the poet seems to recognize the detachment from nature and feel a bit sad about it, missing something, and yet in a way that makes for a lonely sort of beauty.” “This book of poems uses poetic technique, intellectual material, memory, and emotion in unexpected and moving originality. Like a good teacher, the poems come right at the reader with bald questions and make the reader struggle with them. The reader doesn’t feel alone though. The quest for ‘inventive solutions to intractable questions’ is shared painfully, humorously, and with great tenderness. We are left with a wry wisdom and raw elements, in a space between all thought, where the real activity occurs silently.” |
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