Ebook
Whether recalling long days on a tractor, late nights at prayer meeting, or the joyful heartbreak of raising a family, the poems in Twisted Shapes of Light take truth where they find it. William Jolliff wraps both arms around the phenomenon old Quakers called “that of God in everyone,” welcoming into his work a unique cast of characters seldom portrayed in contemporary poetry. The result is an honest struggle with faith and failure--and even an occasional revelation.
”Jolliff is like a postmodern Job, who alternates between
belief, skepticism, and earnest longing to believe. His poems
create a theodicy by presenting intimate portraits of family,
personages from history, and biblical characters, or even himself,
cataloging with deft observation and wry wit the foibles and real
evil along with uncalculated, unconscious acts of virtue and
love."
--David Mehler, editor of Triggerfish Critical Review
"Twisted Shapes of Light maps a humanity sown, cultivated,
tended, and harvested from the farms and churches of Midwest Ohio
to the suburbs and campuses of coastal Oregon. Jolliff’s deeply
lived poems sing a faithful compassion towards people and places
that often defy any evidence of a merciful God. Dramatizing how we
live our doubt and pain, our belief and joy, these verses remind us
that evidence is not what we need."
--Samuel Smith, Professor of English, Messiah College
“Jolliff captures struggle with spirit in all its forms: the
trepidations of a student at registration, the mirror of reluctance
seen in cattle stunned with the unexpected gift of hay in winter,
the unabashed joyous explosion of children from stifling
schoolhouse doors, and the ghosts that visit a farmer listening to
the devilish beat of rain on a tin barn roof. . . . And, of course,
the songs of the people at missions, in the fields, at funerals,
and in shelters--Jolliff adds his delicate songs to theirs in
unison."
--Michael F. Latza, editor of Willow Review
"Humble and radiant, Jolliff tends the thorns of faith knowing that
to touch is to bleed, to grasp the rough-hewn cross is to ask for a
handful of splinters. But what joy in the wounding, Jolliff
proclaims with a penitents’ bold irreverence and deep
compassion."
--Gina Ochsner, author of People I Wanted to Be
"From a mud-wracked farm in southern Ohio to a small gray college
in western Oregon, Jolliff carries with him the shadows of the poor
in spirit cast by ‘twisted shapes of light.’ Few other poets can so
evoke the wretchedness of our human experience and yet, at the same
time, intuit its hidden spiritual comforts. Read him for a shock of
dire recognition and come away with hard-earned hope."
--Paul J. Willis, author of Say This Prayer into the
Past
"These poems not only reveal Jolliff as a beautiful writer and
craftsman but also as a sharp-eyed observer of the world, offering
a vision that is simultaneously generous, precise, and humorous.
Twisted Shapes of Light manages to achieve two sometimes
contradictory goals: rewarding the poetry aficionado while
welcoming the casual reader."
--Nathaniel L. Hansen, editor of Windhover: A Journal of
Christian Literature
William Jolliff grew up on a family farm just outside Magnetic Springs, Ohio, and currently serves as Professor of English at George Fox University. His previous books include The Poetry of John Greenleaf Whittier: A Readers' Edition (2000).