A timely and poignant poetry collection by acclaimed author and former Poet Laureate of Kentucky Silas House, including the poem read at Governor Andy Beshear’s 2023 inauguration.
Silas House is known throughout the South as a quintessential person of letters—a novelist, music journalist, environmental activist, columnist, and the former Poet Laureate of Kentucky. His first full-length collection of poetry blends his Appalachian upbringing with his ongoing relation to the natural world. Poems of praise for community and the collective appear alongside others tinged with nostalgia and grief when House keenly observes the loss of rural America as he once knew it. Returning to his touchstone subjects, Silas recalls wild places, echoes stories from a lingering and living past, and explores an abiding connection to family, friends, and fellow artists.
Silas House is the nationally bestselling author of six novels--Clay's Quilt, 2001; A Parchment of Leaves, 2003; The Coal Tattoo, 2005; Eli the Good, 2009; Same Sun Here (co-authored with Neela Vaswani) 2012; Southernmost (2018), as well as a book of creative nonfiction, Something's Rising, co-authored with Jason Howard, 2009; and three plays.
His work frequently appears in The Atlantic, The New York Times, and Salon. He is former commentator for NPR's "All Things Considered". His writing has appeared in recently in Time, Ecotone, Oxford American, Garden and Gun, and many other publications.
House serves on the fiction faculty at the Spalding School of Writing and as the National Endowment for the Humanities Chair at Berea College.
As a music writer House has worked with artists such as Kacey Musgraves, Jason Isbell, Lee Ann Womack, Kris Kristofferson, Lucinda Williams, The Judds, Jim James, and many others.
House is the recipient of three honorary doctorates and is the winner of the Nautilus Award, an EB White Award, the Storylines Prize from the New York Public Library/NAV Foundation, the Appalachian Book of the Year, and many other honors.
Poetry is meant to be savored. So mostly poetry and I are not really a thing. I devour my reading. Yet, I know this author for his fiction and I will say the poems took my breath away in a devoured sense. If I were a savoring reader I can bet they’d be even more exquisite.
The interview of the author (an Appalachian writer) by Barbara Kingsolver ( another Appalachian writer) in the back pages is well worth the cost of the book.
Be like Barbara Kingsolver and print this out and stick it on your fridge.
New Year Prayer
Find a body of water, and be still beside it for a time. Build a fire and watch the flames. Sit on the porch. Lie on the grass. Light candles. Take a deep breath. Write a letter to someone. Discover something new everyday. Learn. Tell stories. Listen to old people. Ask them questions. Give to others when you can and treat yourself occasionally. Read real books and newspapers. Always buy the grocery store flowers if they catch your eye. Remember that there is power in moderation. Learn to cook or bake a new dish. Enjoy every meal. Savor your food. Drink water. Any chance you get, hold a baby. When the opportunity arises, dance. Always swim or wade in the water. Study leaves. At least once this year, pee outside. Be completely quiet. Turn your favorite song up loud. Sing along. If someone makes you feel bad all the time, get away from them. Laugh with others. Laugh while you’re alone. Spend time with animals. Don’t judge. Think this: “There but for fortune go I” or “Everyone you meet is fighting a hard battle.” Forgive others. Forgive yourself.
This collection from Silas House is lovely. It has such a personal sense of place while touching on universal themes. I was moved especially by the recollections and reflections of a rural childhood. House has a voice; one I find even more focused and sharp in his poetry than when trying to carry the plot and length of a novel. I will be recommending this book to others and look forward to its wider release.
Silas House's writing continues to be a gift to these mountains. Even though he's known first and foremost as a novelist, he nailed poetry. I've dog eared my favorites. My heart has wept though I physically have not. So many bittersweet words. So many ghosts.
As a Kentuckian living far from home, this collection made my soul fly back to roost. Silas House’s sense of place is so vivid it practically breathes. His lyricism shines in his novels, but here his exacting, intentional love of language makes the poems truly sing. And the conversation with Barbara Kingsolver at the end is pure dessert. Like a good friend's porch, this is a collection to visit time and time again.
It feels campy to say, but I feel changed after reading this. I know all books change us to some extent but I feel something in me evolved or was born as I read this. I related so much to so many of the themes: being “country”, the working class, the trailer, the loss of hope, the search for hope, the music, the nature. I don’t know. I’m so happy to have stumbled upon this and am so grateful to Silas House for creating it.
One reason that I enjoy Silas House’s fiction is that his language is so poetic. I was happy to discover that his first collection of poetry is full of stories. I love these poems, especially his experiments with repetitive forms like the sestina and the pantoum (I do love pantoums!). There are poems about Sinead O’Connor, John Prine, Hazel Dickens, and the Everly Brothers. This definitely lived up to my high expectations.
I heard Silas House read at a local Episcopal church and he was amazing. He talked about his roots in poverty and rural Kentucky culture. He said that Appalachian stereotypes have produced an embarrassment and deep self loathing in many of its literary works. He didn’t say J. D. Vance but it is clearly a valid reason that Vance’s characterizations are so demeaning. His poetry is realistic but rooted in a deep love for the “ghost” of his home and family. The depth of his poetic skill is phenomenal. I very highly recommend this book.
My favorite book of poems by one of my favorite writers.
Here are some of my favorites from this collection— “Watch Closely” “When Time Are Dark” “Symbiosis” “The Most Beautiful Words” “John Prine” “Cornbread” “A River” “New Year Prayer” “Last Supper”
My introduction to Silas House’s writing was Clay’s Quilt. I read it in the middle of the night while breastfeeding my firstborn. Turns out that firstborn, now 20, recently published her first poem in a poetry journal. The words seeped into her. As a Kentuckian living in Indiana I am separated from my homeland, while the distance is not far, the cultural divide is. I think that is why that late night spent reading Clay’s Quilt stuck with me all these years. (Believe me, very little else from that time is recalled.) I recognized a voice from home just when I needed it. Far from my family and just beginning my own. Every time I read another Silas House book I feel the same. “But always there was Kentucky because once it lives in you, it is a little light that never dims.” Thank you for this poetry collection. “Cornbread made me cry, I had a mamaw & granny too, now long departed. But carried. I look forward to sharing this with my poet daughter.
I've been trying to be more sparing with my 5-star reviews lately, but All These Ghosts is definitely deserving of one!
As a feminine man growing up in the American South, House's words resonate with me unlike anything else has in my adult life. I too, was raised by women. I too, was judged by the men I grew up around, and assumed homosexual. They couldn't have been more wrong, but now, looking back, I can see that I was probably miming the ladies I was around most—doing the things they do, showing interest in the things they were interested in, injecting myself into their conversations I wasn't supposed to be listening to...
In one poem, he quotes his sister's boyfriend, who asks: "Why does he talk like that? Why does he sit like that?"
In grade school, I often overheard observations like this being made about myself: How I stood, hands on hips, and how I dressed. How I sat. How I spoke. The things I drew, the things I liked...
Silas House's All These Ghosts makes me feel seen and understood, in a way that the men of my family will never understand.
I was thrilled to receive an autographed copy of Silas House’s first book of poetry when I heard him speak recently. If you get the chance to hear him, go.
He is genuine, eloquent and engaging. Thanks to him, I have a new favorite word - “gloaming.” A word I was unfamiliar with, yet it represents my favorite time of day.
I dove right into this beautiful, lyrical book which represents such strong connection to Appalachia … deep roots, our natural world, dogs, friendship, kinship, water, ghosts, loneliness, longing, comfort food, memories, music, trauma, and perseverence.
The good, the bad and the ugly. All remembered. All accepted. All forgiven. All, shared with a profound sense of pride.
His themes resonated deeply and engaged all of the senses. I was ‘there.’ Present, in that moment. After reading, I had to sit with it a spell.
This book makes me proud to be a Kentuckian - a gift, in and of itself. Thank you Silas.
One of the VERY best poetry collections EVER! I truly felt like I was reliving my favorite parts of Appalachia. The imagery is spectacular! This collection will tug at your heart, make you smile, shed a few tears, and even snicker a little bit!! I can hear the sounds of the Appalachian nights. I can smell the smells in the kitchen and the rain in the forest. But most of all, these poems have made me reflect on how we treat people and how we are treated by people. They do, indeed, pack a punch - one we all need! Silas House All These Ghosts
there was something so intimate and personal about this collection—specifically the first half—that made me want to live within each stanza. perhaps that’s just because i come from a momma raised on a tobacco farm in kentucky with half my family still in the state. perhaps it’s the fact that i’ve seen cumberland falls and that i have a mamaw and a granny who’s connection came through food. aside from that, though, there was a reminiscent feeling, a love both at a distance and with closeness, that felt beautifully portrayed—especially regarding the queer experience. the nature imagery was another well done plus.
Silas House has written a lovely collection of poems, many of which are an ode to his rural Kentucky upbringing. While I grew up in Illinois, his remembrances bring back fond memories, for as a Gen X youth, my friends and I explored our natural surroundings with abandon. Poems that I found especially evocative were Gloaming, Leslie County, Pining ( I knew immediately who A.P. and Sara were), Double Creek Girl, False Spring, Timesickness (as we get older, we often experience timesickness for family long gone), Dale Hollow Lake, 1989, and The Most Beautiful Words.
Silas House is one of the most talented authors of the modern age. He is a must read if you want to read about authentic Appalachia from an Appalachian. His prose is beautiful; his poetry...leaves me nearly speechless.
These poems put into words all the feelings of Appalachia in the most beautiful eloquent way. This is true Appalachian art. His voice is incredible and indelible. This is the most beautiful collection of poetry I've read this year.
When I tell you these poems touched my soul I’m not kidding. They are so full of life, dreams and pain. I read a few each morning when it was quiet and I could really absorb them. House has a way with words that are so beautiful. His novels are great, but here in the poetry is where I think his talent really shines.
I won this in Goodreads Giveaways and it was just stunning. I was born and raised in Oklahoma and while this is about Kentucky, so many of the poems resonated with me so deeply. Such similarly. Beautiful!
Love Silas House’s writing. I’ve read six of his novels and, now, this book of poetry. I don’t take poetry easily; out of all my books only thirteen are poetry and three of those are children’s. All These Ghosts hit me hard. I wasn’t expecting the tears, the rereading, the savoring.
I absolutely loved this collection of poetry. From the prologue poem to the interview included at the end with Barbara Kingsolver. Just a breathtakingly beautiful encapsulation of home/Kentucky.
Silas lets us in. We get the chance to be in Appalachia with him, in his living room, his thoughts, and his pen. I’ll be going back to these poems over and over again.