16,82 €
18,69 €
-10% with code: EXTRA
The Words We Do Not Have
The Words We Do Not Have
16,82
18,69 €
  • We will send in 10–14 business days.
In The Words We Do Not Have, Steve Brisendine brings experience into sharp focus-a road trip with his son, evenings spent playing pool, an abused childhood classmate-along with meditative explorations of life, death, aging, and faith. The author employs as a title for each poem an unusual foreign word (along with its definition), a strategy that unifies the collection, while also yielding delightful and unexpected trajectories as the poems unfold. Brisendine's imaginative lexicon offers us a sp…
18.69
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN-10: 1952411521
  • ISBN-13: 9781952411526
  • Format: 12.7 x 20.3 x 0.5 cm, minkšti viršeliai
  • Language: English
  • SAVE -10% with code: EXTRA

The Words We Do Not Have (e-book) (used book) | bookbook.eu

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In The Words We Do Not Have, Steve Brisendine brings experience into sharp focus-a road trip with his son, evenings spent playing pool, an abused childhood classmate-along with meditative explorations of life, death, aging, and faith. The author employs as a title for each poem an unusual foreign word (along with its definition), a strategy that unifies the collection, while also yielding delightful and unexpected trajectories as the poems unfold. Brisendine's imaginative lexicon offers us a space where "a heart has/ spilled itself, where words bloomed/ into something past words."

-Janice Northerns, author of Some Electric Hum



"We have enough wind in Kansas," Steve Brisendine opens his excellent new book. "When you / walk into it, it pulls." Beginning with the language of wind, Brisbane reveals a dark world through a series of tongues. In "Mokita," a classmate is abused and silent, eventually dead. We learn the title's Kilivila meaning: "something everyone knows but no one talks about." Outlining a "slippery downhill way," these grave, sometimes minutial poems (as in "Qarba," the appearance of white hairs in a man's beard) highlight how life gives us "hope of reunion . . . but also the knowledge that such might never happen. Dark, global, nuanced in how it reveals a gritty world."


-Tyler Robert Sheldon, Editor-in-Chief of

MockingHeart Review and author of Consolation

Prize (Finishing Line Press, 2018)

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  • Author: Steve Brisendine
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN-10: 1952411521
  • ISBN-13: 9781952411526
  • Format: 12.7 x 20.3 x 0.5 cm, minkšti viršeliai
  • Language: English English

In The Words We Do Not Have, Steve Brisendine brings experience into sharp focus-a road trip with his son, evenings spent playing pool, an abused childhood classmate-along with meditative explorations of life, death, aging, and faith. The author employs as a title for each poem an unusual foreign word (along with its definition), a strategy that unifies the collection, while also yielding delightful and unexpected trajectories as the poems unfold. Brisendine's imaginative lexicon offers us a space where "a heart has/ spilled itself, where words bloomed/ into something past words."

-Janice Northerns, author of Some Electric Hum



"We have enough wind in Kansas," Steve Brisendine opens his excellent new book. "When you / walk into it, it pulls." Beginning with the language of wind, Brisbane reveals a dark world through a series of tongues. In "Mokita," a classmate is abused and silent, eventually dead. We learn the title's Kilivila meaning: "something everyone knows but no one talks about." Outlining a "slippery downhill way," these grave, sometimes minutial poems (as in "Qarba," the appearance of white hairs in a man's beard) highlight how life gives us "hope of reunion . . . but also the knowledge that such might never happen. Dark, global, nuanced in how it reveals a gritty world."


-Tyler Robert Sheldon, Editor-in-Chief of

MockingHeart Review and author of Consolation

Prize (Finishing Line Press, 2018)

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