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    GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE 2007

    International Shortlist

    Click here to purchase Salvation Blues, by Rodney Jones

    Book: Salvation Blues
    Poet: Rodney Jones
    Publisher: Houghton Mifflin

    Click the book cover or title to purchase Salvation Blues online.

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    Biography

    Rodney Jones, Griffin Poetry Prize 2007 International Shortlist

    Salvation Blues is Rodney Jones’ eighth book of poetry. Previous collections include Kingdom of the Instant: Poems (2004); Elegy for the Southern Drawl (1999); Things That Happen Once (1996); Apocalyptic Narrative (1993); Transparent Gestures (1989); The Unborn (1985); and The Story They Told Us of Light (1980). He was named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and the winner of the 1989 National Book Critics Circle Award. His other honours include a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Peter I.B. Lavan Award from the Academy of American Poets, the Jean Stein Award from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, a Southeast Booksellers Association Award, and a Harper Lee Award. Rodney Jones is a professor of English at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.

    Summary

    In Salvation Blues Jones has chosen the best of his previous work and included 25 new poems from the past three years which share a common theme. Ask Rodney Jones how he spends his time these days when he’s not writing poetry: he plays jazz guitar; he goes fishing; and he regrets the Bush administration. In describing the new poems in the collection Jones says: ‘The new poems make me uncomfortable. They seem aesthetically and politically unflinching, statements of my depression and disgust with the people of the United States.’

    Judges’ Citation

    “There are not many poets who get as much of American life in their poems as Rodney Jones. His Salvation Blues, a book made up of one hundred poems taken from six previous collections published over the last twenty years, brings to mind Whitman. Jones asks in a poem, what happened to all the people the older poet cheered westward across the continent? They are all here in his poems, making ends meet, working as farmers, shipping clerks, waitresses, car mechanics, butchers, strippers and teachers, while trying their best to believe in the American dream and a religion whose preachers tend to be actors and salesmen whose pulpit is television. Jones is a marvelous story teller and a contemplative man with an interest in both character and the way the world works. ‘Most of us are compositions that begin in error,’ he says. He never forgets that. His poems are angry, bawdy, funny, wise and deeply moving. They sing to remind us of our humanity and to heal the language of its long service as a mere tool.”

    The United States

    If you asked what it is all about
    I would say a field a green field
    in the turning rows a killdeer
    and after that barbed wire
    the hedge with its cardinals
    a blacktop then another field

    Corn one of the main things
    after water and before milk
    for whiskey is in it and grits
    gold for chickens pearls before swine
    there is a factory in every plant
    if we could be properly humble

    it is the greatness of the nation
    along with cartoon animation
    automobiles and rock 'n' roll
    jazz and basketball evolved here
    but not one other U.S. God
    just the corn's imperial row

    on row then Sylvester Stallone
    and airbrushed Elvis thank you
    very much ladies and gentlemen
    Presley Dylan and the Supremes
    no I would say a field a vast field
    at the center top-hogs and cattle

    then art the cities New York
    Chicago Houston Seattle man
    told me last week experts can
    teach starlings to talk hell
    televangelists may yet witness
    in terza rima each stalk of corn

    contributes it has been so
    hybridized with its immense
    ears it no longer resembles
    maize it is what we have left
    to barter for oil and microchips
    tones of it siloed and elevated

    to float us through droughts
    and wars and speculations we ask
    which most cogently represents us
    Leaves of Grass or The Simpsons
    there is the idea that every
    living thing is a subset of human

    control and the other notion
    that though we may go on
    a few hundred or thousand
    years the poison has spilled
    no more land will be made
    the search for another arable

    planet may prove moot as the
    search for earthly sentience
    meanwhile this taco here
    crunches in the great scheme of
    things we persist one people one
    of the potential fates of corn

    From Salvation Blues: One Hundred Poems, 1985-2005, by Rodney Jones
    Copyright © 2006 by Rodney Jones

    Listen to Rodney Jones read The United States

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    More about Rodney Jones

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    Photo credit: G. Jones

    Note: Summaries are taken from promotional materials supplied by the publisher, unless otherwise noted.

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