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About this book
As a child of deaf adults (CODA), Pia Taavila first learned to communicate when her deaf father fingerspelled the names of toys in her crib and her mother showed her the signs for objects in picture books. From this primary visual orientation, in combination with her own innate sense of imagery, Taavila crafted the lush verse featured in Moon on the Meadow: Collected Poems.
Taavila uses the graphic power of her poetry to evoke emotions about all aspects of existence — love, loss of love, family, death, and desire — feelings elicited through a lens attuned to the simple beauty of the natural. Most of the poems in Moon on the Meadow have been published at least once in established journals, testimony to the broad appeal of her passionate outlook on life. Yet, Taavila believes that her experiences as a CODA are essential to her ability to write at all. She never strays far from her home, her family, and the comforts they bring her through her art:
At a wedding, a flautist's
languid notes lilt on the air.
My mother, who cannot hear,
leans forward, attentive
to the dip and sway of his body.
She signs to me:
It sounds like butterflies
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Praise for Moon on the Meadow
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Publications
- Introduction
- Asylum
- Some Poems Come
- Julia Sails From Ireland
- Mailman
- Black and White
- Snapshots 1–12
- Steps
- Brushing My Mother’s Hair
- Cunningham’s Drug Store
- Hats
- Deaf Club Christmas Bazaar
- A Deaf Man Uses the Telephone
- Home Run
- The Deaf Club Sails to Bob-Lo Island
- School Store
- Spelling Test
- To Hear Again
- Mother
- Roof
- Losing Faith
- Visit
- Resurrection
- School for the Deaf
- Deaf Like Me
- Mother’s Day
- Miller Avenue
- November, 1963
- Uncle Jimmy
- Missa Liturgis
- Samaria: Woman at the Well
- Invitation
- Eagle’s Nest
- Undone
- Six-Year Forecast
- Hospital
- Mercenary
- Truncated
- Hilton Head
- Showdown
- Ex Libris
- Telegraph
- New Linen
- Upon Learning of Your Death
- Brigantine Island
- Hollow
- Christmas Dance
- Teaching Load
- A Colleague’s Death
- For the Living
- Widow Woman
- He Asks Me to Write of Him
- Moon on the Meadow
- Train Window
- At Water’s Edge
- Kentucky Tomato
- Drive
- Penobscot Bay Lament
- Museum of Fine Arts: Boston
- Michigan
- San Francisco
- Cabbie
- Flight to India
- Kashmiri Houseboat
- Two Peonies
- Thaw in Karnataka
- India: Step
- Banyan Haiku
- Taj Mahal
- The Last Note
- Walloon Lake
- Swimming in the Nude
- Edge
- Consider:
- Andre Agassi, 36, Holds On to Win
- Watching the Weatherman
- Haze
- Kodak Moments
- The Zen of Cleaning Glasses
- Matthew
- Gabriel
- Snowboard 101: My Four Sons
- Bone
- Guest Room
- Daughters
- One Young Wife’s Tale
- The Children and I Shall Meet Again
- Rx: Mother and Children
- Sewanee Haiku
- The Workshop Poet
- Reprieve
- Assignment
- In Fog
- Lake Cheston
- Lake Cheston in the Rain
- Southern Landscape
- For Sale
- A Woman’s Want
- Cape Cod
- Proposal
- Falling Leaves
- Roxbury Mill
- Waterrock Knob
- Slant Cinquain
- Blender
- The Love Zone ABCs: A Romance
- Slope
- The Moon
- Vine
- Spring Rain
- Earth Science
- Lazy Sunday Morning
- Hindman Poetry Reading
- Trellis
- Penance
- David
- The Bells of Santa Croce
- Orthodoxy
- Wheat Fields
- Bag of Rings
- Sail
- E. Atlantic
- Delray
- Rite of Purification