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One Secret Thing

One Secret Thing

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Author: Sharon Olds
Publisher: Knopf
Category: Book

List Price: $16.95
Buy New: $10.01
You Save: $6.94 (41%)



New (25) Used (4) from $10.01

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 60538

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 112
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.7 x 0.4

ISBN: 0375711775
Dewey Decimal Number: 811.54
EAN: 9780375711770
ASIN: 0375711775

Publication Date: September 30, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand new item. Over 4 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Order with confidence. Code: B20090107232017T

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - One Secret Thing

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

Sharon Olds completes her cycle of family poems in a book at once intense and harmonic, playful with language, and rich with a new self-awareness and sense of irony.

The opening poem, with its sequence of fearsome images of war, serves as a prelude to poems of home in which humor, anger, and compassion sing together with lyric energy—sometimes comic, sometimes filled with a kind of unblinking forgiveness. These songs of joy and danger—public and private—illuminate one another. As the book unfolds, the portrait of the mother goes through a moving revisioning, leading us to a final series of elegies of hard-won mourning. One Secret Thing is charged throughout with Sharon Olds’s characteristic passion, imagination, and poetic power.

The doctor on the phone was young, maybe on his
first rotation in the emergency room.
On the ancient boarding-school radio,
in the attic hall, the announcer had given my
boyfriend’s name as one of two
brought to the hospital after the sunrise
service, the egg-hunt, the crash—one of them
critical, one of them dead. I was looking at the
stairwell banisters, at their lathing,
the necks and knobs like joints and bones,
the varnish here thicker here thinner—I had said
Which one of them died, and now the world was
an ant’s world: the huge crumb of each
second thrown, somehow, up onto
my back, and the young, tired voice
said my fresh love’s name.

from “Easter 1960”




Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars hard-won and beautifully seen   November 27, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Actually I don't this IS a dark book. It works very hard to accomodate the illness and death of the poet's mother, to find moments of grace and of tenderness in what seems to have been a difficult life and a relationship characterized by struggle. As in all of Olds's work, there's a sort of examination in service of redemption going on here -- a looking hard at the stuff that experience offers, so we can find it what can be embraced or heldas good. I think that readers struck by the emotional force of this poet's work sometimes don't see how deeply moral it is -- that quest for what can be affirmed, and how a world in which violence or pain is dealt out can also be a location of blessing.


3 out of 5 stars Not sure how I feel   November 23, 2008
 0 out of 2 found this review helpful

I think Olds is a wonderful poet. This selection of poems are very dark and some are very disturbing. They serve their purpose but they are painful.

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