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You Haven't Asked About My Wedding or What I Wore: Poems of Courtship on the American Frontier

You Haven't Asked About My Wedding or What I Wore: Poems of Courtship on the American Frontier

Previous price: $19.95 Current price: $17.95
Publication Date: October 15th, 2014
Publisher:
University of Alaska Press
ISBN:
9781602232358
Pages:
160
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Description

“Nowhere / on these parchment leaves do I find / myself, my likeness, my name, / not a whisper—Cynthia—not one / breath of me.”

For thirty years poet Jana Harris researched the diaries and letters of North American pioneer women. While the names and experiences of the authors varied, Harris found one story often connected them: their most powerful memories were of courtships and weddings. They dreamed of having a fine wedding while they spent their lives hauling water, scrubbing floors, and hoping for admirers. Many married men they hardly knew.

Based on primary research of nineteenth-century frontier women, Harris uses her compelling poetry to resurrect a forgotten history. She captures the hope, anxiety, anger, and despair of these women through a variety of characters and poetic strategies, while archival photographs give faces to the names and details to the settings. Harris’s meticulous research and stirring words give these pioneer women a renewed voice that proves the timelessness of the hopes and fears of love and marriage.

About the Author

Jana Harris teaches creative writing at the University of Washington and at the Writer’s Workshop in Seattle. She is editor of Switched-on Gutenberg and author most recently of Horses Never Lie about Love.

Praise for You Haven't Asked About My Wedding or What I Wore: Poems of Courtship on the American Frontier

“In this compelling collection, Jana Harris, poet and longtime researcher of the pioneer era, imagines and animates the voices of 19th-century women as they adapt to the frontiers of marriage and the American West. While Harris’s vivid language and imagery offer more than enough pleasures to delight and sustain the reader, it is her remarkably intuitive grasp of individual lives (inner and outer) that makes this book an exceptional, complex realization of time, place and experience. It might be said Harris has written a novel in poems—a novel one can’t put down.”
— Ann McCutchan, author of River Music: An Atchafalaya Story and Circular Breathing: Meditations from a Musical Life

“Harris is the bard of pioneer women’s voices in the Northwest and now . . . it is clear that she is speaking for a vast American experience in the nineteenth century, one that resonates to this very day. . . . ‘Who can account,’ she writes in her rendering of the voice of Lucy Stevens from Oregon, 1875, ‘for what catches in memory’s cogs?’ It is the American experience that has caught in Harris’ cogs and here she gives it back to us in all its glory.”
— Janet Sternburg, author of Phantom Limb; White Matter: A Memoir of Family and Medicine; The Writer on Her Work

“In poems at once accessible and deep, Jana Harris brings to vibrant life the women who pioneered the Pacific Northwest. While they faced an array of common struggles, in Harris’s wise telling they emerge nonetheless as unforgettable individuals."
— Suzanne Lebsock, author of A Murder in Virginia: Southern Justice on Trial

“You Haven’t Asked About My Wedding or What I Wore is both a wrenching history lesson and a lyrical celebration of courage."
— Valerie Miner, author of Traveling with Spirits

"A marvel of storytelling and a totally unique way of breathing life into stuffy archives, making women’s lives hum, with its acute sense of place and language. It’s a thrilling, daring work.”
— Louise Bernikow, author of Among Women and Dreaming in Libro: How a Good Dog Tamed a Bad Woman