In Search of Small Gods

Front Cover
Copper Canyon Press, 2009 - Poetry - 87 pages

ÒJim Harrison has probed the breadth of human appetitesÑfor food and drink, for art, for sex, for violence and, most significantly, for the great twin engines of love and death. Perhaps no American writer better appreciates those myriad drives; since the publication of his first collection of poetry . . . Harrison has become their poet laureate.ÓÑSalon.com

In Jim Harrison's new book of poems, birds and humans converse, biographies are fluid, and unknown gods flutter just out of sight. In terrains real and imaginedÑfrom remote canyons and anonymous thickets in the American West to secret basements in World War II EuropeÑHarrison calls his readers to live fully in a world where ÒDeath steals everything except our stories.Ó In Search of Small Gods is an urgent and imaginative bookÑone filled with Òthe spore of the gods.Ó

Maybe the problem is that I got involved with the wrong crowd of gods when I was seven. At first they weren't harmful and only showed themselves as fish, birds, especially herons and loons, turtles, a bobcat and a small bear, but not deer and rabbits who only offered themselves as food. And maybe I spent too much time inside the water of lakes and rivers. Underwater seemed like the safest church I could go to . . .

Jim Harrison is the author of thirty books of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction, including Legends of the Fall and Shape of the Journey. A long-time resident of Michigan, he now lives in Montana and Arizona.

About the author (2009)

Jim Harrison is the author of thirty books, including Legends of the Fall, Dalva, and Shape of the Journey. His work has been translated into two dozen languages and produced as four feature-length films. In 2007, Mr. Harrison was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He divides his time between Montana and southern Arizona.

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