The Woods Are On Fire is Fleda Browns deeply human and intensely felt poetic explorations of her life and world. Her account includes her brain-damaged brother, a rickety family cottage, a puzzling and sometimes frightening father, a timid mother, and the adult life that follows with its loves, divorces, and serious illnesses. Visually and emotionally rich, Browns poems call on Einstein, Shakespeare, Sophocles, Law and?Order, Elvis, and Beethoven. They stand before the Venus de Milo as well as the moon, as they measure distances between what we make as art and who we are as humans. In wide-ranging formsfrom the sestina to prose poemsthey focus on the natural world as well as the Delaware legislature and the inauguration of William Jefferson Clinton.
The Woods Are On Fire includes nearly fifty?new poems, along with poems selected from seven previous books, showcasing an influential American poets work over?the last few decades.?