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The Takeaway Bin

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Book Details

ISBN / ASIN1933132817
ISBN-139781933132815
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank3,219,177
MarketplaceUnited States  🇺🇸

Description

Oblique Strategies is a card game invented in 1975, by Brian Eno and Peter Schmidt. “Over one hundred worthwhile dilemmas” are printed on a pack of cards and offer a set of possibilities to apply “when a dilemma occurs in a working situation.” The Takeaway Bin borrows from that concept, presenting poems that reply to various daily dilemmas, specific or obscure. The Takeaway Bin arises out of an ultramodern language aftermath: the fragments and shards of language we are currently left with in an age of verbal foreshortening, where Photoshop has imploded the failsafe idea that “seeing is believing,” and Wikipedia has shifted the idea of fact into the realm of a constantly updating consortium. This melee of reference points is the Takeaway Bin's fuel, and the profound plasticity of modern reality is the engine Mirosevich harnesses. LJ Moore, SF Examiner With wit and canny wordplay, Toni Mirosevich eviscerates linguistic bromides, delivering poems that consistently surprise. A high-octane critique of contemporary culture emerges from her fearless take on the oddments and phrasing of idiomatic American discourse. In long-lined sonnets and jazzy improvisations, the speaker juggles a mix of colloquial and formal diction, learned and popular referents. Winning titles “Lie or Lay,” “Lucky Stiff,” “Old and In The Way,” may charm, but this poet knows “Our worst impulse has yet to be discovered.” A provocative intelligence powers these sizzling lyrics. Robin Becker author of Domain of Perfect Affection What a playful, incisive attitude The Takeaway Bin conveys. Our rituals of frailty and justification are wittily revealed. Since we are prone to “repeating the same folly again and again./ We might as well turn up the volume,/ and emphasive the obvious.” We hear phrases we know but begin to understand them differently, we see aspects of our lives we recognize, but learn to conceive of them in new ways. Toni Mirosevich knows, “If our interest goes below the surface plane then love will grow.” Like the goodies we find in a takeaway bin, these poems enticingly display what is too often carelessly tossed off by others. Camille Dungy author of Suck on the Marrow and Smith Blue
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