In the Permanent Collection
vol. 21: Vassar Miller Prize in Poetry
- Winner of the Vassar Miller Prize in Poetry, 2013
April, 2014
Published
80
Pages
Recommended Text
Ideal for Classrooms
About Wortman's In the Permanent Collection
Trying to make sense of a disordered world, Stefanie Wortman’s debut collection examines works of art as varied as casts of antique sculpture, 19th-century novels, and even scenes from reality television to investigate the versions of order that they offer. These deft poems yield moments of surprising levity even as they mount a sharp critique of human folly.
“These poems seem haunted by a mostly nameless melancholia. In the Permanent Collection, however, turns its grim geography of prisons, mortuaries, and tawdry suburbs into something close to classical elegy. ‘In sunken rooms,’ Wortman writes, ‘on scratchy rugs, maybe we’ve never known happiness.’ It’s that ‘maybe’—the smart hedge—that renders her poems complex, often beguiling, but never without a gesture of redemption. This should be part of any serious poet’s permanent collection.” —Chad Davidson, author of The Last Predicta and judge
From “Long Occupation”
I was naïve of foreign affairs in the Four
Seasons bar when a Swiss knife maker
assured me of the coming war…
Classroom Adoption
In the Permanent Collection is a recommended text for use in classrooms where the following subjects are being studied: Creative Writing, Literature, and Poetry.
Trying to make sense of a disordered world, Stefanie Wortman’s debut collection examines works of art as varied as casts of antique sculpture, 19th-century novels, and even scenes from reality television to investigate the versions of order that they offer. These deft poems yield moments of surprising levity even as they mount a sharp critique of human folly. “These poems seem haunted by a mostly nameless melancholia. In the Permanent Collection, however, turns its grim geography of prisons, mortuaries, and tawdry suburbs into something close to classical elegy. ‘In sunken rooms,’ Wortman writes, ‘on scratchy rugs, maybe we’ve never known happiness.’ It’s that ‘maybe’—the smart hedge—that renders her poems complex, often beguiling, but never without a gesture of redemption. This should be part of any serious poet’s permanent collection.”— Chad Davidson, author of The Last Predicta and judge
Adopted By
[“Dixie State University for "Poetry Writing"”]
About the Author
STEFANIE WORTMAN was born in Kansas City. She earned an MA from Boston University and a PhD from the University of Missouri. Her poems and essays have appeared in the Yale Review, Antioch Review, Boston Review, Southwest Review, and other publications. She currently lives in Rhode Island.
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