Archive of New Mexico Poetry – Rebecca SeiferleAztec Ruins
Standing here at the beginning of the ruins, we inhabit The bird that cries like a man…
the bird that buzzes
one last breath…just before
These warbles, clicks, cries of surprise throng us with a language
our own voice, the lost voice Great Circle
As he aged into impassive calm,
“The Great Circle,” my picture book
over the Indian and the buffalo,
What he caught exactly
that, circling the globe, dissected the earth into halves. While he “Great Circle” was published in The Music We Dance To, (Sheep Meadow Press 1999). Rebecca Seiferle is the author of the poetry collections, The Music We Dance To (Sheep Meadow Press, 1999) and The Ripped-Out Seam, and of a translation of Cesar Vallejo’s Trilce. Poems from The Ripped-Out Seam won the Bogin Award from the Poetry Society of America, the Writers’ Exchange Award, the National Writers’ Union Prize, and the volume was a finalist for the Paterson Poetry Prize. Her translation of Trilce was a finalist for the PenWest Translation Award and on the shortlist for the Columbia Translation Award. Poems from The Music We Dance To were nominated for the Pushcart Prize in 1997, 1998, and 1999 and won the Cecil Hemley Award from the Poetry Society of America. She has been a regular reviewer for Calyx and The Harvard Review. Seiferle is listed with Tumblewords, the New Mexico Arts Program, and has taught at San Juan College since 1990, and is the editor of the new online literary magazine, “The Drunken Boat.” It should be added that Rebecca Seiferle’s on-line chapbook, “The Sacrifice Tree” may be found at Santa Fe Poetry Broadside, and that The Music We Dance To was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. A selection from this book will appear in The Best American Poetry 2000, edited by Rita Dove. For more information about Rebecca Seiferle, and some poems, visit her website: http://www.thedrunkenboat.com/seiferle.htm |
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