MFA 2017
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Browsing MFA 2017 by Subject "Free verse"
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Item First Steps(MFA in Creative Writing, The University of Tampa, 2017-06-15) Kiely, DeborahThe poems are intentionally accessible and holding at their core observations or concerns that are meant to be meaningful to the reader. Topics are drawn from an experienced life; work in corporate America, the domestic life of a mature family, the experiences in a small town community. The author tends to explore the nature of our temporal existence and the social norms of belonging. The work is written in a narrative free verse style often utilizing the second person to deliver a more quirky feel. The writer is simultaneously learning her own lessons in form and meter while delivering to the reader a diversity of experiences. In this work each poem stands as an original event.Item Florida Avenue Torch Song(MFA in Creative Writing, The University of Tampa, 2017-06-15) Russo, GiannaHow do we love home when home includes ugliness? Can we treasure a place whose history, values and politics have supported injustice and suffering? And if those societal wrongs are still evident today—then what? Florida Avenue Torch Song, a collection of 56 mostly free verse, lyric-narrative poems, attempts an answer. Here, home is the South generally, and Tampa, Florida, specifically. Russo, a Tampa native, examines her own culpability in accepting a host of biases and, in doing so, forces us to examine our own. The collection is peopled with the working class and working poor, those who’ve just made it and those who are still struggling. At the same time, these poems set mostly in Tampa’s iconic old neighborhoods and along its historic thoroughfares, acknowledge everyday goodness and celebrate backyard beauty. Ranging over personal experience, historical events, and today’s socio-political issues, ultimately these poems bear witness to a century in Tampa. The poems in Florida Avenue Torch Song urge us to question our attachment to the places we cherish and to each other with compassion and candor.