Press kit for Falling Brick Kills Local Man


Falling Brick Kills Local Man ordering page | Press release | Blurbs | Bio | Additional info | Author's photo | Cover image | Excerpt

 

Falling Brick Kills Local Man
Mark Kraushaar
Publication date April 1, 2009
LC: 2008038483 PS
96 pp. 7 x 10
ISBN-13: 978-0-299-23080-7
Cloth $26.95 t

ISBN-13: 978-0-299-23084-5
Paper $14.95 t


Winner of the 2009 Felix Pollak Prize in Poetry
Selected by Marilyn Nelson

The Felix Pollak Prize in Poetry    
The Brittingham Prize in Poetry
Ronald Wallace, General Editor

Press Release:

Falling Brick Kills Local Man is a daring and inventive collection of narrative poems rich with thoughtful and precise language. Mark Kraushaar writes about what moves him, whether that is the war in Iraq, the notion of synchronicity, the retelling of children’s stories, or a problem of recollection. Often inspired by newspaper stories or witnessed scenes, these poems are a refreshingly honest exploration of our interconnected and multifaceted world.


Blurbs:

“A repertoire of good stories, and something of the visionary.”—Marilyn Nelson

“Generally triggered by something as deceptively simple as a small newspaper item, an overheard remark, or an incident observed in a bus station, Mark Kraushaar’s meditative/narrative poems illuminate moments of surreal reality by telling little stories of heartbreakingly human intent. I love these poems and am proud to have given several of them their first publication in the pages of The Gettysburg Review.”—Peter Stitt

“Whether speaking for a maker of military uniforms or a prison guard, a wife writing to Walt Whitman about her husband’s failure or Jill of nursery rhyme fame, Mark Kraushaar has the uncanny ability to understand how precious identity and selfhood are to every one of us. One of his characters observes, ‘Long ago, before there was anything / there was nothing, except that every one was always / on their way . . .’ and it reads like a statement of faith in humanity. And though another speaks of the earth, as seen from a plane, as ‘wonderful, ridiculous, and sad,’ you finish this collection happy to know that Mark Kraushaar lives there.”—Mark Jarman

Bio:

Mark Kraushaar is the recipient of Poetry Northwest’s Richard Hugo Award and two Wisconsin Arts Board awards for poetry and has been a finalist for both the Walt Whitman Award and the May Swenson Prize. His poems are widely published and have been anthologized in Best American Poetry 2006; Motion: American Sports Poems; Visiting Walt: Poems Inspired by the Life and Work of Walt Whitman; and Who Are the Rich and Where Do They Live.

Additional information

For more information, in addition to this press kit, contact our publicity department, (608) 263-0734, email: publicity@uwpress.wisc.edu

Excerpt

I mean, the spinning Earth whirls east
and a dog walks wagging by.
I can’t explain.
Inflexible, garrulous, sad, anymore
we’re our own full-time jobs.
Wasn’t Dad the best?
Didn’t light form in the doorways?
Didn’t the mailman come?
Look Jane. Oh, turn and look.
Past the market by the playground,
here we are, so unhip, so well meaning and bizarre.

—excerpt from “Dick and Jane”
© The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System. All rights reserved.

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Cover image:

Cover of book is black with the shadow of a person walking toward a building.

This cover image can be downloaded and used in any web-based publicity for this book. For a larger version for use in print publicity, click here.

Author Photo:

Photo of author Mark Kraushaar

For a larger version for use in print publicity, click here
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