Dirt Eaters

Dirt Eaters - University of Central Florida Contemporary Poetry Series

Paperback (30 Jun 2004)

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Publisher's Synopsis

With vivid characters and striking details, the poems in Dirt Eaters recount the author's examination of her Cracker and southern ancestry in a way that extends beyond the familial to include a region and class sometimes maligned, sometimes romanticized, and often misunderstood. In these haunted, lyric narratives, culture, religion, and class collide. The resulting poems serve tribute to a place and its people through examination of sin and redemption, darkness and light, haves and have-nots, and shame and pride. The book is borne of the consequences of leaving a place and family sleeped in the history and traditions of the South. The poet, having moved to the Midwest, has become a sort of expatriate in her father's eyes, and she herself has underestimated the hold that home would have over her. These poems are a mystical journey back through her ancestry. The dead serve as conjurers and characters both real and mythologized throughout the collection: Uncle Seward, who uses dice and the Bible as a means of prophecy, blind Aunt Ater, who finds solace and doom in biblical numbers, and an unlucky man facing certain death as he stands on an alligator's back.

Book information

ISBN: 9780813027241
Publisher: University Press of Florida
Imprint: University Press of Florida
Pub date:
DEWEY: 811.6
DEWEY edition: 22
Language: English
Number of pages: 80
Weight: 109g
Height: 220mm
Width: 140mm
Spine width: 6mm