Night & Ox

Fiction & Literature, Poetry
Cover of the book Night & Ox by Jordan Scott, Coach House Books
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Jordan Scott ISBN: 9781770564831
Publisher: Coach House Books Publication: October 11, 2016
Imprint: Coach House Books Language: English
Author: Jordan Scott
ISBN: 9781770564831
Publisher: Coach House Books
Publication: October 11, 2016
Imprint: Coach House Books
Language: English

bronchia think
form a bombsight
think periosteum singing
particle falconry workpiece
two lowcut hills seeking
what stone is
for body
is herd
alliterations

Night & Ox is a long poem working its interruptions to a degree where it's broken by the will to live. A poem that invokes expansive loneliness, where the poet's emotional response is to endure. A crushed line of astral forms and anatomy in perpetual remove; it is a poem that nurtures vulnerability: some soft-footed embryo sounds against language’s viscera. Night & Ox possesses a feral minimalism for those too tired and too frantic with joy to cope with narrative.

‘A fierce, ladderlike cri de cœur – at times a cri de cur – Night & Ox pulses with sawblade nocturnes that gnaw through the very rungs on which they’re wrung. One part Jabberwocky-talkie, one part fatherhood ode, the poem seeks a threshold, where the “mondayescent” gives way to ardour, splendour, even love. Scott is a cosmoglot of the throat’s ravine, and this is his manic, pandemonic article of faith.’ – Andrew Zawacki

Praise for Blert:

‘Scott takes us down to the basement of words, where sound and rhythm rule, and poets learn their craft. Blert is a strange and gorgeous work of linguistic materialism.' – Dennis Lee

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

bronchia think
form a bombsight
think periosteum singing
particle falconry workpiece
two lowcut hills seeking
what stone is
for body
is herd
alliterations

Night & Ox is a long poem working its interruptions to a degree where it's broken by the will to live. A poem that invokes expansive loneliness, where the poet's emotional response is to endure. A crushed line of astral forms and anatomy in perpetual remove; it is a poem that nurtures vulnerability: some soft-footed embryo sounds against language’s viscera. Night & Ox possesses a feral minimalism for those too tired and too frantic with joy to cope with narrative.

‘A fierce, ladderlike cri de cœur – at times a cri de cur – Night & Ox pulses with sawblade nocturnes that gnaw through the very rungs on which they’re wrung. One part Jabberwocky-talkie, one part fatherhood ode, the poem seeks a threshold, where the “mondayescent” gives way to ardour, splendour, even love. Scott is a cosmoglot of the throat’s ravine, and this is his manic, pandemonic article of faith.’ – Andrew Zawacki

Praise for Blert:

‘Scott takes us down to the basement of words, where sound and rhythm rule, and poets learn their craft. Blert is a strange and gorgeous work of linguistic materialism.' – Dennis Lee

More books from Coach House Books

Cover of the book Hard To Do by Jordan Scott
Cover of the book Asbestos Heights by Jordan Scott
Cover of the book Of the Subcontract by Jordan Scott
Cover of the book All Day I Dream About Sirens by Jordan Scott
Cover of the book Probably Inevitable by Jordan Scott
Cover of the book For Display Purposes Only by Jordan Scott
Cover of the book The Poetic Edda by Jordan Scott
Cover of the book The Inspection House by Jordan Scott
Cover of the book Cheer Up, Jay Ritchie by Jordan Scott
Cover of the book Indexical Elegies by Jordan Scott
Cover of the book Exploring Contemporary Craft by Jordan Scott
Cover of the book The Steve Machine by Jordan Scott
Cover of the book HTO by Jordan Scott
Cover of the book Haircuts by Children and Other Evidence for a New Social Contract by Jordan Scott
Cover of the book The Lease by Jordan Scott
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy