Calumet Editions

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A Breviary for the Lost

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What is prayer but acknowledging one’s relationship to the Divine—and what is poetry but prayer in image and metaphor? This collection offers intimate poems as testimony to the author’s spiritual life, from entering religious vocation in 1965 through the pandemic pause of the 2020s. These are prayers for times of transition, vivid metaphors of lived experience, and reflections on what it means to be human.

He is at the top of his game

—Bill McCarthy, author of Past Sins and Fall Risk

Description

What is prayer if not the acknowledgement of one’s relationship to the Divine? What is poetry if not a kind of prayer that rises from the heart in image and metaphor? What is this book if not the poems offered up as testimony to the author’s relationship to the Divine? From his entry into the religious life in 1965 to the 2020’s pandemic pause, these are intimate prayers, images of life lived in times of transition, and metaphors of how one understands what it means to be human.

Product Details

PublishedJanuary 31, 2023
ImprintCalumet Editions
LanguageEnglish
Print length212
ISBN-13978-1959770343
Dimensions6 x 0.53 x 9 inches

Few writers can turn traditional into classical like Loren Niemi. While so many of today’s artists surround themselves with noise, Niemi is a Master of silence and negative space. He has been an influencer in the poetry community for years; and, truth be told, I steal from him every chance I get.

—Danny Klecko

Gratitude for Loren Niemi’s gift of poetry! He helps us see the beauty in the detritus and the sacred in every moment.

—Elizabeth Ellis

Loss is paramount in these poems that traverse the canonical hours of the Catholic religious order, entered by a young Loren. Seeking an epiphany, or maybe to escape the Vietnam war, the hormonal anguish of youth grinds against ‘those cold chapels’. When he stopped wearing the robe, things learned included “how to be alone,” driving night cab, picking up John Berryman and teaching art. Niemi reflects on what it means to be at the end of life’s journey, calling attention to: ‘What changed? You? The world?’

—Jules Nyquist, author of Atomic Paradise, 2021 NM/AZ Book Award winner