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Gary J. Whitehead

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Gary J. Whitehead

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January 2008


Average rating: 3.98 · 42 ratings · 12 reviews · 8 distinct worksSimilar authors
A Glossary of Chickens: Poems

3.83 avg rating — 24 ratings — published 2013 — 5 editions
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The Velocity of Dust

4.17 avg rating — 6 ratings — published 2005 — 2 editions
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Strange What Rises

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it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 5 ratings2 editions
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Measuring Cubits While the ...

3.75 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2008
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After the Drowning

3.33 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 2006 — 2 editions
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Walking Back to Providence

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Gary J Whitehead 1st edit/1...

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Salt Hill Issue Four (Issue 4)

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More books by Gary J. Whitehead…
Cormac McCarthy
“In the dream from which he'd wakened he had wandered in a cave where the child led him by the hand. Their light playing over the wet flowstone walls. Like pilgrims in a fable swallowed up and lost among the inward parts of some granitic beast. Deep stone flues where the water dripped and sang. Tolling in the silence the minutes of the earth and the hours and the days of it and the years without cease. Until they stood in a great stone room where lay a black and ancient lake. And on the far shore a creature that raised its dripping mouth from the rimstone pool and stared into the light with eyes dead white and sightless as the eggs of spiders. It swung its head low over the water as if to take the scent of what it could not see. Crouching there pale and naked and translucent, its alabaster bones cast up in shadow on the rocks behind it. Its bowels, its beating heart. The brain that pulsed in a dull glass bell. It swung its head from side to side and then gave out a low moan and turned and lurched away and loped soundlessly into the dark.”
Cormac McCarthy, The Road

Herman Melville
“With no small interest, Captain Delano continued to watch her---a proceeding not much facilitated by the vapors partly mantling the hull, through which the far matin light from her cabin streamed equivocally enough; much like the sun---by this time hemisphered on the rim of the horizon, and, apparently, in company with the strange ship entering the harbor---which, wimpled by the same low, creeping clouds, showed not unlike a Lima intriquante's one sinister eye peering across the Plaza from the Indian loop-hole of her dusk saya-y-manta.”
Herman Melville

Cormac McCarthy
“every man is tabernacled in every other, and he in exchange and so on in an endless complexity of being and witness to the uttermost edge of the world.”
Cormac McCarthy

Richard Wilbur
“Now winter downs the dying of the year,
And night is all a settlement of snow;
From the soft street the rooms of houses show
A gathered light, a shapen atmosphere,
Like frozen-over lakes whose ice is thin
And still allows some stirring down within.”
Richard Wilbur, Collected Poems, 1943-2004

Cormac McCarthy
“Once there were brook trout in the streams in the mountains. You could see them standing in the amber current where the white edges of their fins wimpled softly in the flow. They smelled of moss in your hand. Polished and muscular and torsional. On their backs were vermiculate patterns that were maps of the world in its becoming. Maps and mazes. Of a thing which could not be put back. Not be made right again. In the deep glens where they lived all things were older than man and they hummed of mystery.”
Cormac McCarthy, The Road

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