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Circadian

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A beautiful new collection from an acclaimed poet The poems in Joanna Klink’s new collection Circadian take as their guiding vision circadian clocks. Moved by the presence and withdrawal of light, these internal clocks influence rhythms of sleeping and the opening and closing of flowers, the speed at which the heart pumps blood, the migratory cycles of birds. With love poems and prayers, Joanna Klink offers us patterns of glowing alertness and shared life, patterns that speak to the flickering circuit between inner and outer landscapes, that bind each beating heart to the pull of the tides.

82 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2007

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About the author

Joanna Klink

14 books52 followers
Joanna Klink is an American poet. She was born in Iowa City, Iowa. She received an M.F.A. in Poetry from the Iowa Writers' Workshop and a Ph.D. in Humanities from Johns Hopkins University. She was the Briggs-Copeland Poet at Harvard University and for many years taught in the Creative Writing Program at The University of Montana. Her new book, THE NIGHTFIELDS, was published July 7, 2020 by Penguin Books.

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5 stars
74 (46%)
4 stars
51 (32%)
3 stars
22 (13%)
2 stars
11 (6%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Erin.
29 reviews10 followers
August 16, 2007
The poems in this collection are astoundingly beautiful. From the first line to the last, their quiet, precise movement travels in the overlap of personal relationships and the natural world. In one breath, Klink will give you an image that has you flying, and in the next she will have you believe you have actually been swimming all along. Whether writing about loneliness, suicide, mental illness, marriage, or migration, she is constantly asking what is enough to keep things always beginning.

Her syntax is so subtly deliberate, you can actually feel (although just barely) something moving around amongst the words. She pushes language very gently across thresholds, and in this way I would say she is experimental - not as, say, the "language poets" are experimental, but in a way that is fresh and takes responsibility for itself. She pushes the bounds of meaning without sacrificing meaning. Beautiful. Hushed. A little bit disorienting, but in the way that waking from a deep sleep is disorienting - it brings with it some clarity, some memory of a place that was still and not still.

I think she is such a lovely and unique voice, and I find it hard to really compare her to other poets. But is you like Mary Oliver, Gregory Orr, Emily Dickinson, W. S. Merwin, or Elizabeth Bishop, I think you might find yourself quite in love with these poems.
Profile Image for Margaryta.
Author 6 books50 followers
December 9, 2018
Klink's poems are meditative and attentive, if a little meandering, making me have to consciously flip back to the beginning of the poem and reread in order to grasp everything instead of just hanging on to whatever line I'm currently reading. Maybe I'll get more into it after another reading.
Author 4 books12 followers
August 4, 2008
Marvelous syntactical inventions, pleasurable associative movement. She's been reading Brigit Pegeen Kelley (and like Kelley can veer along the edges of preciousness) but also Laura Jensen (_Bad Boats_).
475 reviews1 follower
June 5, 2019
Ugh. So much wasted potential. The words in these poems are beautiful and Klink uses a ton of figurative language—but there's such thing as too much of a good thing, which is the case with most of the poems in Circadian. The poems are about nature, the seasons, snow, stars, rivers and seas. I got distracted easily while reading, mainly due to Klink's weird aversion to periods; after three, four, or ten stanzas without pause, my brain started turning to mush as so many ideas jumbled together. Klink likes to use similes and metaphors in succession, so that by the time you've finished the sentence you can barely remember the original subject of the poem. I also find her a little repetitive, which is something I'm picky about as I prefer poets who use economy of words well. For example:

"And the pale blue beryl waters, the emeralds/and other beryls, the natural blue stones below the supple//waterstones, and the evanescence of sea through light/that separates all the colors of daylight from their mineral luster//the new grasses on the beaches, the plusher greens they portend—/even the gray-and-speckled-greens of human eyes"
(From "Blue Ice")

Poems that I liked:
"Sea Levels," "Porch in Snow," "Hourglass" (the first half, anyways...)

=2.5/28 (8.9%) poems that I liked.
Profile Image for Stewart Lindstrom.
347 reviews19 followers
December 31, 2019
This collection is everything I look for in a poetry collection. Elegant and full of mystery, Klink's evocations of the natural world never cease to amaze and move. At all times elusive, but never needlessly cryptic, Klink finds a golden mean between illuminating and hiding her meanings in poetry.
Profile Image for Naomi.
1,393 reviews306 followers
May 5, 2014
Splendid poems requiring the reader to pause and contemplate that stillness, to sit back and marvel, to engage the complexity of every day with our whole selves. These are not the attentive poems that invite joyful reverie, but a quieter and keener way of awakening and making sense of our lives.
Profile Image for 17CECO.
85 reviews12 followers
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October 24, 2016
Had this kicking around for years finally gave it a read. 2008 me would have appreciated the delicacy of the poems, how they leave airy silences between the landscape and self. 2016 me had a lot of trouble with these silences.
Profile Image for Ella Frances.
34 reviews16 followers
December 27, 2025
I read this today beside the Christmas tree which glistens gently in front of the window. Joanna continues to delight. In love with every one of these moodscapes. She is one of the most intriguing and precise poets and her writing could not have come at a better time.
Profile Image for William Stobb.
Author 15 books11 followers
March 20, 2008
Lovely, elegaic, eco-oriented poems, blurring boundaries between self & world, making beauty happen in those new spaces.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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