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Hanging
on for Dear Life

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“In a volume dedicated
to his father, Thom Tammaro goes over familial territory where smoke stacks
stand like trees in the steel town where he was raised. It is about the
human relationship between father and son, their working-class roots,
the catechisms and holy history of one’s childhood. If poetry can
be seen as enablement, this collection holds up the meaning of experience,
imagery, and travels that make hallways where you swear you see the words
live. The book is the steady logging of details that are our breath. Hold
on to these poems for the dear life of your humanity. Here the poem and
prose-poem master sings with seeming ease.”
—Diane Glancy, Author of
Pushing the Bear: A Novel of the Trail of Tears and Stone Heart: A Novel
of Sacajawea
“Tammaro’s poems are
class acts of reliving, rejoicing, and remembering the spectacle of the
mundane, the everyday matter that we all know and too often ignore in
the rush of moving forward. In the sweep of a prose poem and the slap
of a lyric, his meditations on life, family, work, love, and death help
us all to let go of the real and hold on to the spiritual. It’s
rare to have your own memory so touched by the writing of another.”
—Fred Gardaphe, author of Leaving
Little Italy: Essaying Italian American Culture and Italian Signs, American
Streets: The Evolution of Italian American Narrative.
”Thom Tammaro's poetry reawakens
the souls of landscape and our private identities. Before we know it,
his poems bring these worlds together, until we are alive within a larger
experience.
—Ray Gonzalez, author of The
Hawk Temple at Tierra Grande, Turtle Pictures, and No One Out There
is Looking for Us: Prose Poems by 24 American Poets.
ISBN 0-944024050-5
$12.95 paper |
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When the Italians Came
to My Home Town

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This collection reflects
Tammaro’s Italian heritage and Catholic upbringing in western Pennsylvania.
It is divided into three sections: the first, a selection of poems and
prose-poems about Tammaro’s youth; the last, a selection of poetry
from his adulthood; and in the middle, a factual account of the history
of Italian immigration to Pennsylvania’s steel valley.
Among the poems’ recurring topics
is religion, from images of Tammaro’s Catholic grade school to “Walking
to My Office on Easter Sunday Morning.” Also frequently appearing
in the poems are warm and insightful views into his family—from
the first two poems in the collection to the later series which depict
the father-son relationship. An Italian aura pervades the book, of course,
and in the title essay Tammaro explores his ethnic identity by mapping
out its history in western Pennsylvania.
“Words come to mind—poignant,
moving, powerful, memorable—but this book is even more. Its poems
are narratives that move to the core of the complex problems of faith.
‘A hope sustained by hunger’ is one of my favorite lines.
Tammaro is unforgettable in tracing the heart of Italian emigrants to
the Pennsylvania steel towns and back. In looking for transcendence, Tammaro
finds it in his words which illuminate the ‘holy factory workers.’
How heart-rendering to hear the beautiful music from that part of America.
There’s something here we all need to hear.”—Diane Glancy
80 pages
$6.95 paper
0-944024-28-9
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