Treasures Stored for Winter
by
Book Details
About the Book
Joan Burstyn’s fourth book of poems, Treasures Stored for Winter, draws the reader into the author’s life from the mid-twentieth century to the present day. At times, personal and political events combine—as happens on the evening of June 30, 1982, when the last state legislature rejected the Equal Rights Amendment. At that moment, Burstyn stood with other women around a pond in South Orange, New Jersey, as they raised their voices in protest as remembered in “Waiting to Rise Again.”
I felt braided into others’ lives, mingled beyond extrication. We stood together in darkness, each with candle flooding the pond with light, hope filling our eyes even as the Equal Rights Amendment was snuffed out, swiftly as a candle’s flame …In this collection, Burstyn makes clear that life demands both awe and optimism from us.
“My first dip into Treasures Stored for Winter brings up a small package, “After Snow”; it bursts open with imagery so vibrant and glowing that I can’t help myself. I dip again, bring out “While the House Sleeps”; with its commanding imagery metaphorically I become “… a matador/swirling my red cloak/before the bull, prodding it with my words.” —Joanna Chrzanowski, SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor; chair, English Department, Jefferson CollegeAbout the Author
Joan Burstyn, an award-winning poet, is the author of three earlier collections of verse—Song Cycle (1976), Waiting for the Lame Horse (1987), and Path into the Sun (2009). She was the winner of the 2007 Milton Dorfman international poetry prize. An historian of education, she has written and edited several other books.