A Woman Coming from under the Mosquito Netting and Lighting Her
Pipe at the Wick of a Lantern Rooster and Hen before Hydrangeas
Lover Taking Leave of a Courtesan
Hibiscus and Korean Nightingale
Tiger Licking Its Leg
Hairdresser
Tiger and Dragon
Two Women, One Seated on a Bench Smoking a Pipe and Another Holding
a Fan, under the Light of the Crescent Moon
Sparrows and Camellia
Riverboat Party
An Eagle Attacking a Monkey under a Pine Tree
Girl Playing Samisen
Peacock
Sudden Rain on Mt. Tempo
Bamboo and Poppies
Maples
Swallows and Waves
Young Samurai on Horseback
The Love Letter
Descending Geese at Katada
Horses Romping on the Beach
The Poet Li Po Admiring a Waterfall
Carp Lured by Fallen Cherry Blossoms
Woman Tearing a Love Letter
Butterflies
The Insistent Lover
Golden Pheasant and Peonies
Courtesan with Her Attendant
Crickets, Cage, and Flowers
Firefly-Catching
Bullock with Puppy
Crows
Beauty with Cat
Irises and Grasshopper
Girl with Ox
The Bow Moon
Owl
Rabbits and Crows in the Night Snow
Rabbits in Grass under the Moon
Willow and Egret
Long-Tailed Blue Bird Flying over Azalea Blossoms
Mountain and River on the Kiso Road
Mandarin Ducks and Snow-Covered Reeds
Monkey and Wasp
Cranes and Pines
Blossoming Plum in Mist and in Snow
South Wind at Clear Dawn
Lovers in the Snow
Peach Blossom Spring
Young Man with Hawk
Two Beauties Leading a Horse
Grasshopper and Gourd Vine
Deer and Poems
Boy Dancing with a Hobby-Horse
Chrysanthemums at Night
The Kegon Falls
Three Women under a Flowering Cherry Tree
Bullfinch on a Branch of Weeping Cherry
A Mother Dressing Her Son in a Kimono
Lotus and Willow in Moonlight
$2500 marketing and publicity budget
Co-op available
Galleys available: national mailings with special push to
publications to publications that have previously published and
reviewed Bohince, including New York Times Book Review, The New
Yorker, and The Nation.
National advertising in Poetry, Writer's Chronicle, and relevant
literary blogs and websites
eBook available at same time as print publication, eBook ISBN to be
included on all press materials and wherever print ISBN is listed.
Author will promote both mediums through social media.
Internet marketing campaign to include announcement on Sarabande
national listserv as well as review copy mailing to online journals
and blogs
Electronic postcard to announce publication sent to Bohince's
contacts
Paula Bohince is the author of The Children and Incident at the Edge of Bayonet Woods. Her poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Review of Books, Poetry, Granta, and elsewhere. She has received prizes from the Poetry Society of America and the UK National Poetry Competition, as well as the Discovery”/The Nation Award.
One of Eight Notable Titles for 2016, Pittsburgh City Paper
"There’s movement in Bohince’s poems, but it’s gradual and subtle
— an eye passing like Ken Burns’s camera over a still image,
discovering new details."
—New York Times Book Review
"This collection of evocative poems brings to life a world long
gone but resonant with our own. Each finely wrought poem reveals
hidden depths upon rereading. One not to miss."
—Library Journal, starred review
"Bohince’s quiet revelations shed a strange, sometimes painful
light on what seems familiar. . . . Bohince offers a discreet,
surprising kind of ekphrasis."
—Publishers Weekly
"Ekphrasis seems too sharp a word. . . to describe the silky music
of these elegantly balanced poems. . . . Many Western poets,
from Ezra Pound to Gary Synder, have been hopelessly in love with
Japanese culture and its exotic erotics, but Bohince joins the very
best of writers who slide open the screens, fully aware there are
other screens still concealing our deepest pleasures and
pains.”
—The Harvard Review
"A collection of surprising, almost concrete, coherence. The poems
are invariably short; some vignettes are quickly sketched as if in
watercolor, others more finely engraved; some poems hide a
narrative, others an emotion. But most striking is that while the
array of images is vast, they are tied together by a similar,
stylistic sensibility."
—Asian Review of Books
"Lithe and exacting, this collection draws inspiration from old
Japanese woodblock prints and scroll paintings, resulting in lines
at once visual and isolating."
—Foreword Reviews, "The Best Poetry of Winter 2016"
“Paula Bohince has written a series of exquisite ekphrastic
miniatures based upon Japanese scroll paintings and woodblocks of
the Edo period . . . Compressed and delicately shaded, the words of
these poems are treated as pigments, applied sometimes in daubs of
pure verbal color, sometimes in fine washes that simulate
transparency.”
—“Immortal Hand or Eye” by Jamie James, Parnassus: Poetry in
Review
"Each scroll and print is a scene, and from each Bohince designs a
narrative, her lines heavy with precise detail, distinct motions,
bare truths, and subtle wishes. Remote yet highly
intimate, Swallows and Waves walks a neat path between
secret and revelation.”
—The Cincinnati Review
"In these emotionally restrained lyrics, Bohince adeptly observes
her own feelings as she sees them reflected in the Japanese scrolls
she describes. These poems bear rereading in order to allow their
delicate subtleties, like reflections on a still pond, to
emerge."
—The Hopkins Review, "The Ekphrastic Moment," print and
online
"[Bohince] has a knack for startling lyricism and unusual images. .
. . Bohince's notebook of green observations and red feelings has
yielded a collection of deeply sensuous poems--poems that ask us to
look at the world anew."
—The Hudson Review
"Paula Bohince’s empathic lyrics based on Japanese scroll paintings
and wood prints demonstrate 'how attention and technique coalesce /
into art.' She has written a carefully made, elegantly poised, and
deeply humane book of poems.
—Edward Hirsch
"Paula Bohince’s renderings of brilliantly particular Japanese
woodcuts and paintings in Swallows and Waves both honor and
extend their precipitating subjects. Mindplay, wordplay, and
worldplay combine in these consummate ekphrastic poems,
offering–just as the original artworks do, but in a vocabulary
unmistakably Bohince’s own–glimpses of life as it always exists:
inside action, moment, and the implausible, multiplylayered silks,
pelts, and feathers of felt existence."
—Jane Hirshfield
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