Winter Hours: Prose, Prose Poems, and Poems

by Mary Oliver

Paper Book, 1999

Status

Available

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Publication

Boston : Houghton Mifflin, 2000, c1999.

Description

From the winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award, her most personal book yet "What good company Mary Oliver is!" the Los Angeles Times has remarked. And never more so than in this extraordinary and engaging gathering of nine essays, accompanied by a brief selection of new prose poems and poems. (One of the essays has been chosen as among the best of the year by THE BEST AMERICAN ESSAYS 1998, another by The Anchor Essay Annual.) With the grace and precision that have won her legions of admirers, Oliver talks here of turtle eggs and housebuilding, of her surprise at an unexpected whistling she hears, of the "thousand unbreakable links between each of us and everything else." She talks of her own poems and of some of her favorite poets: Poe, writing of "our inescapable destiny," Frost and his ability to convey at once that "everything is all right, and everything is not all right," the "unmistakably joyful" Hopkins, and Whitman, seeking through his poetry "the replication of a miracle." And Oliver offers us a glimpse as well of her "private and natural self-something that must in the future be taken into consideration by any who would claim to know me.".… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member wvlibrarydude
What a wonderful way to finish 2023 with one hour left in the year. Mary Oliver continues to enchant me with her vision of the world through poetry and prose. Captivating. Moving. Uplifting. Truth. Stark and naked with her observations. I simply can't get enough.
LibraryThing member greeniezona
While I picked this up at this moment due to a library reading challenge prompt to read a book with Winter or Cold in the title, I do also like to read a new (to me) Mary Oliver collection each year, so this seemed an obvious choice.

Of course I loved it. And there was a wonderful moment of
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serendipity in discovering an essay on Walt Whitman and Leaves of Grass among Oliver's essay here, so soon after I had just read Leaves of Grass for the first time. I wouldn't necessarily say that Oliver's essays are as good as her poems, but I would say they provide some fascinating glimpses and insights that will enrich my appreciation of her going forward. (Except, perhaps, the essay on eating snapping turtle eggs, which I had a visceral knee-jerk reaction against, that I have not yet attempted to talk myself round from.)
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6203
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