Sheila-Na-Gig Inc.

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Forthcoming Chapbook by Sheila-Na-Gig Author George Franklin

What the Angel Saw, What the Saint Refused

Chapbook: $14.00 ($2.00 US Shipping per order)

Pre-order discount: $11.20 ($2.00 US Shipping) until June 15

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ABOUT THE BOOK

In What the Angel Saw, What the Saint Refused, the angel doesn’t know the purpose of his presence among humans, but grief draws him to itself repeatedly. He is helpless to improve matters, even though he sees what is happening with perfect clarity. The saint, more precisely an anti-saint, also refuses any subterfuge, excuse, or consolation that would diminish the harshness and injustice he witnesses. If the saint had been Job, he would have spit into the whirlwind or, better yet, laughed. He wants to shake people out of their certainties and especially rejects the transcendence of the philosophers. Unlike the angel, the saint sees a bitter humor in the tragedies that surround him, and that humor gives him an equanimity that surfaces in his conversations and encounters. Both angel and saint are creatures of negation and irony. They are fundamental, modern, even mirror images of ourselves. If the angel of sorrow and the saint of unbelievers did not exist, just maybe, it might have been necessary to invent them.

ADVANCE PRAISE FOR WHAT THE ANGEL SAW, WHAT THE SAINT REFUSED

You will be astonished at what a narrative poem can achieve when you read George Franklin’s ground-breaking collection, What the Angel Saw, What the Saint Refused. You will learn the difference between grief that is despairing and grief that is not despairing, the second hinging on an appreciation for the unremarkable life, as you follow an angel with no destination, an angel drawn by humanity’s grief. The angel can change nothing. /He is not here to bless or comfort, to join a war or stop one.  Still, capacious imagery challenges philosophy: [pigeonsarc across the sky like missiles thrown off course, and creates a beauty that transcends existentialist angst: drafts/From the roof and door pulled the fire one way, then another. The terrible beauty that exists, to borrow a phrase from Rilke, because Franklin’s angel will make you think of Rilke, shows you that though pain is never symmetrical, your own grief will be balanced by a belief in something larger than death. You will find harmony in a refuge of cellos and resilience in waking from a dream laughing.

––Jane Ann Fuller, author of Half-Life

 If the angel struggles to remain aloof and elevated, “Even though he could spread his wings / And be elsewhere, the angel stands still in the road,” the saint embraces the muck of imperfection, “he will consider your hands. What kind of work does this one do?  He disdains hands without callouses.”  In the masterful language of George Franklin, the angel and the saint can be memorable observers of the human tragedy, celestially poetic step-siblings, or powerful window to look from at who we are. You choose. Yet, I think Mr. Franklin would agree, the third option will open your eyes to examine your own life. Let these poems do that.

––Juan Pablo Mobili, author of “Contraband” and Guest Editor at The Banyan Review

 Angels and saints occupy a decent amount of space in poetry, but George Franklin’s angel and saint bring them to our doorstep the way few poets have or can. His angel is empathetic and sad over human tragedy, but he knows he can offer no relief—he’s only a witness for eternity. Both the angel and the saint sometimes engage with humans (the angel’s talk with the philosopher and the saint’s talk with the librarian are priceless), including with train conductors, gamblers, and others just trying to get by. The angel writes letters and cheers on explorers, whereas the saint is more cynical and employs a more austere lens, though both want to know so much more about the often-difficult mysteries of living. The philosopher says to the angel: Everything I am, I have put into my books. But we know there’s more. And so, on we all go, a fallen angel asking: What is even a moment of such happiness worth? And the librarian closing the door of the cabin and walking home again. George Franklin has given us huge vistas for our backyards in this thoughtful, brilliant book.

–– Tim Suermondt, author of A Doughnut and the Great Beauty of the World

About Grimmgirl

I co-founded the small press poetry magazine Sheila-Na-Gig in California in 1990. I ran the press for 10 years, producing 14 print copies of the journal. I now hold a Ph.D. in 20th Century American Literature from Ohio University and an MFA in poetry from the University of Washington. I am currently an Associate Professor of English at Ohio University Southern, where I teach courses in composition, American literature, and creative writing. My poetry, creative nonfiction, and critical essays have appeared, or are forthcoming, in The Brock Review, Proteus, Rattle, Spillway, and the critical anthologies, The Body in Medical Culture; On the Literary Nonfiction of Nancy Mairs; and Stephen King’s Contemporary Classics: Reflections on the Modern Master of Horror.

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This entry was posted on May 14, 2024 by in Sheila-Na-Gig online: News.

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