Book Lists

New Releases by Alicia Ostriker

Alicia Ostriker is the author of The Holy & Broken Bliss (2024), A Woman Under the Surface (2021), The Book of Seventy (2009), For the Love of God (2007), The Volcano Sequence (2002).

11 results found

The Holy & Broken Bliss

release date: Oct 22, 2024
The Holy & Broken Bliss
How can we find meaning in the face of aging, illness, and the inevitability of death? How can we respond to the double plague of a fierce pandemic and a divided society? The keenly observant and urgent poems of The Holy & Broken Bliss are grounded in daily existence, human tenderness, the rituals of a long marriage, and the poet’s ongoing spiritual quest. In the middle of a world that seems to be breaking down into suffering and anger, the spare and direct lines of these poems, surrounded by silence, offer a kind of healing. The poems ask us to consider what living looks like inside of ongoing misery (misery we often are responsible for making and accepting). They call us to ask ourselves how we locate joy and even laughter when despair is ever-present. The Holy & Broken Bliss contemplates free will, autonomy, self-control, the commodification of ourselves, and our desires for vengeance, satiation, rage, and acknowledgment of our collective sicknesses, along with the sacred possibilities of love, communication with nature, the power of art, and the "need to praise."

A Woman Under the Surface

release date: Feb 09, 2021
A Woman Under the Surface
From A Woman Under the Surface: MOON AND EARTH Alicia Ostriker Of one substance, of one Matter, they have cruelly Broken apart. They never will touch Each other again. The shining Lovelier and younger Turns away, a pitiful girl. She is completely naked And it hurts. The larger Motherly one, breathlessly luminous Emerald, and blue, and white Traveling mists, suffers Birth and death, birth and death, and the shock Of internal heat killed by external cold. They are dancing through that blackness. They press as if To come closer.

The Book of Seventy

release date: Oct 25, 2009
The Book of Seventy
Alicia Ostriker seizes the opportunity to take us where too few poets have been able to take us: into a domain of what our fabulists like to call the "golden years." as we live longer, we become inevitably curious about the actual texture of these late years, curious about what happens in the soul. Out of that curiosity is a new kind of poetry born, an elderstile that has passion and irony, wisdom, folly, clarity and tenderness. In her keen engagement with the self and the world, Ostriker offers us a voice and a perspective that explore the territory of seventy and beyond.

For the Love of God

release date: Jan 01, 2007

The Volcano Sequence

release date: Feb 14, 2002
The Volcano Sequence
A collection of poems explores Jewish history, liturgy, theology, and the author's relationship with Judaism and spirituality.

Dancing at the Devil's Party

release date: Jan 01, 2000
Dancing at the Devil's Party
Essays that explore the meaning of politics, love, and spiritual life in American poetry from Whitman to the present

The Little Space

release date: Jan 01, 1998
The Little Space
In this selection of poems from thirty years of a distinguished writing career, we see the growth of a poet's mind, heart, and spirit as Alicia Suskin Ostriker struggles with the meaning of family, politics, and faith.

The Nakedness of the Fathers

release date: Jan 01, 1994
The Nakedness of the Fathers
Like much twentieth-century feminist writing today, this book crosses the boundaries of genre. Biblical interpretation combines with fantasy, autobiography, and poetry. Politics joins with eroticism. Irreverence coexists with a yearning for the sacred. Scholarship contends with heresy. Most excitingly, the author continues and extends the tradition of arguing with God that commences in the Bible itself and continues now, as it has for centuries, to animate Jewish writing. The difference here is that the voice that debates with God is a woman's. In her introduction, "Entering the Tents, " Ostriker defines the need to struggle against a tradition in which women have been silenced and disempowered - and to recover the female power buried beneath the surface of the biblical texts. In "The Garden, " she reinterprets the mythically complex stories of Creation. Then she considers the stories of "The Fathers, " from Abraham and Isaac to Moses, David, and Solomon - and their wives, mothers, and sisters. In "The Return of the Mothers, " she begins with a radical new interpretation of the book of Esther, includes a meditation on the silenced wife of Job and the idea of justice, and concludes with a fable on the death of God and a prayer to the Shekhinah, the feminine aspect of God. Ostriker refuses to dismiss the Bible as meaningless to women. Instead, in this angry, eloquent, visionary book, she attempts to recover what is genuinely sacred in these sacred texts.

Stealing the Language

release date: Jan 01, 1987

Writing Like a Woman

Writing Like a Woman
Essays on women poets and on the relationship between gender and creativity
11 results found


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