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Author Adair, Virginia, 1913-2004, author.

Title Ants on the melon : a collection of poems / Virginia Hamilton Adair.

Publication Info. New York : Random House, [1996]
©1996

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Avon Free Public Library - Adult Department  811.54 ADAIR    Check Shelf
 Colchester, Cragin Memorial Library - Adult Department  811 ADA    Check Shelf
Edition First edition.
Description x, 158 pages ; 22 cm
Contents Key Ring -- Summary by the Pawns -- Asbury Park, 1915 -- Fordham Road, 1917 -- The Grandmothers -- Early Walk -- The Shell -- The April Lovers -- Railway Tempo -- Musical Moment -- An Hour to Dance -- Drowned Girl -- Cor Urbis -- The Dark Hole -- The Survivors -- Ants on the Melon -- Yorktown Ferry -- Buckroe, After the Season, 1942 -- By Old Maps -- Narrow Gauge -- LAX-Gatwick -- Return -- Grasmere Journal -- Americans in Bloomsbury -- English Visit -- Nocturne -- Windmill Time -- In Dublin's Fair City, 1963 -- Reunion Between Planes -- Now You Need Me -- Blackened Rings -- The Trek -- Laguna in September -- Surfers -- Winter Zendo -- Riding a Koan -- Light in Wrightwood -- Driving Westward -- Godstone -- Mojave Evening -- Abandoned Anthill -- Two of Us -- Yes, Though I Walk -- Second Coming -- Sonoran Cattle -- Withdrawal -- The Genesis Strain -- God to the Serpent -- TV Brideshead Revisited -- Cutting the Cake -- Child as Deity -- The Wedding Frame -- Home Notes.
Summary One of the most striking achievements of these poems is Mrs. Adair's wedding of traditional rhyme and meter with a sensibility entirely modern, American, sometimes disturbing, occasionally hilarious, always candid. The collection's title poem, "Ants on the Melon," makes a wry, microcosmic comment on overpopulation. "Surfers" draws permanent lessons from the transience of youth. "Break In" transforms a standard burglary into a moment of bitter but wise resignation. Other poems take as their starting point the Gulf War, Zen Buddhism, or the interstate highway system. This collection's broad subject matter, from mourning to sexual joy to the plaint of an old umbrella, is matched by its chronological range, extending from the poet's childhood - "Key Ring" and "The Grandmothers"--To her old age, which lies at the heart of such poems as "Slow Scythe" and "Take My Hand, Anna K."
Mrs. Adair's refusal to publish her first book of poetry until now, at the age of eighty-three, emphasizes the double role of Time as the hero and villain of all human lives, and Time and its rewards and wounds and mercies may be these poems' most profound concern. In his intimate and affectionate Afterword, Robert Mezey, an accomplished poet himself and Mrs. Adair's close friend and literary champion, discusses her reluctance about book publication, and gives us a strong sense of her character and experiences - particularly the devastating impact of her husband's suicide in 1968 and the tragedy of the blindness that struck her in the beginning of this decade. And in the poems we are privileged to make the direct acquaintance, at long last, of this brave and gifted writer.
Subject Poetry.
Poetry. (OCoLC)fst01067691
Genre/Form Poetry (OCoLC)fst01423828
Poetry.
Other Form: Online version: Adair, Virginia, 1913- Ants on the melon. 1st ed. New York : Random House, 1996 (OCoLC)603958878
ISBN 0679448810 (acid-free paper)
9780679448815 (acid-free paper)
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