Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…

Eight years after her revelatory first book, Emily Wilson deepens her focus and extends her vision in new poems of striking intelligence and originality. Venturing into landscapes both interior and exterior,
Micrographia
explores what Wilson calls ‘the complex rigged wildness’ of geographical, emotional, and verbal states, a territory located ‘somewhere in that/enjambment within/a cave within the brain’. Following in the tradition of such poets as Dickinson, Bishop, and Ammons, Wilson’s work regards the mind as ‘enmeshed’ with the natural world, always ‘at the hinge of going over’. Her way of speaking is as precisely calibrated and as restless as her way of seeing, and the terrain of
Micrographia
rises from a rich and unpredictable encounter with poetic language and form. At the same time, the voice of these poems is never less than urgent, ‘coming clear by the foment/moving through it’. Wilson’s eye travels the troubled boundaries between visible and invisible worlds, ranging from coastal Nova Scotia to the Andean highlands to Brooklyn’s industrial Gowanus Canal to the poet’s own backyard. Steeped in tradition but spoken in tones that are utterly distinctive, these intricate poems enter into the microscopic, micrographic spaces between words and things, between thinking and being.
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
Stock availability can be subject to change without notice. We recommend calling the shop or contacting our online team to check availability of low stock items. Please see our Shopping Online page for more details.
Eight years after her revelatory first book, Emily Wilson deepens her focus and extends her vision in new poems of striking intelligence and originality. Venturing into landscapes both interior and exterior,
Micrographia
explores what Wilson calls ‘the complex rigged wildness’ of geographical, emotional, and verbal states, a territory located ‘somewhere in that/enjambment within/a cave within the brain’. Following in the tradition of such poets as Dickinson, Bishop, and Ammons, Wilson’s work regards the mind as ‘enmeshed’ with the natural world, always ‘at the hinge of going over’. Her way of speaking is as precisely calibrated and as restless as her way of seeing, and the terrain of
Micrographia
rises from a rich and unpredictable encounter with poetic language and form. At the same time, the voice of these poems is never less than urgent, ‘coming clear by the foment/moving through it’. Wilson’s eye travels the troubled boundaries between visible and invisible worlds, ranging from coastal Nova Scotia to the Andean highlands to Brooklyn’s industrial Gowanus Canal to the poet’s own backyard. Steeped in tradition but spoken in tones that are utterly distinctive, these intricate poems enter into the microscopic, micrographic spaces between words and things, between thinking and being.