Ebook
What does it mean that the Psalms are the prayer book of the people? Rocking Like It’s All Intermezzo: Twenty-first-Century Psalm Responsorials is one such person’s prayer book. Using familiar refrains as their starting points, the poems attempt a balance between how the psalmist understood God’s faithfulness and how the poet’s lived experience requires revised understanding in some places, renewed commitment in others. In addition to an insightful foreword by acclaimed poet Sofia M. Starnes, these sixty-four poems tell of an intimate, honest reorientation to God’s promises.
“In Rocking Like It’s All Intermezzo, Maryanne Hannan
invites us to find the cosmic irony in understanding human life as
merely a brief solo interlude during which we wait for the climax
in the whole grand story of God’s creation of the world and its
end, when each of our lives is already ultimately eternal and
communal because ‘divinity itself we bear,’ and God’s presence is
palpable in the here and now as well.”
—Mary Ann B. Miller, Professor of Literature, Caldwell University
and Founding Editor of Presence: A Journal of Catholic
Poetry
“In her brief lyrics, Maryanne Hannan offers readers a voice that
poses questions, gives praise, displays wit—all genuine expressions
of a poet who knows the power of the right word rightly placed.
Conversing with the language of the Psalms, these poems showcase
the spectrum of the ways humans respond to the Divine.”
—Nathaniel Lee Hansen, Editor, The Windhover
“Maryanne Hannan’s debut collection is a book of
contemporary poems and prayers that resurrects worn out religious
language and breathes new life into it. . . . The theme
of the volume woven throughout is gratitude for the miraculous fact
of creation as the poet invents a book of Psalms for our present
moment, charging each poem with ‘the light of [God’s] grandeur’ and
laying claim to poetry as both sign of our fall and source of our
salvation, ‘our very own grasped apple.’ To read these poems is to
pray them and to assent to Hannan’s generous doxology: ‘Holy,
what’s lost / Holy, what’s found / Holy, the Whole.’”
—Angela Alaimo O’Donnell, author of Lovers’ Almanac and
Still Pilgrim
Maryanne Hannan has published poetry in numerous journals and
anthologies. A former Latin teacher, she lives in upstate New York.
Her website is www.mhannan.com.