The Near and Distant World
Poems
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
A Most Anticipated Poetry Collection of 2026 from LitHub
A vivid, enthralling new collection of poems from the Vermont Poet Laureate and award-winning author of What is Otherwise Infinite, The Möbius Strip Club of Grief, and Someone Else’s Wedding Vows
In her latest, brilliant collection, Bianca Stone continues to explore and interrogate the full spectrum of life, from an unexpectedly intimate conversation with an internet technician in Brooklyn, to a deep dive into Greek mythology, psychoanalysis, and modern philosophy. “I am thinking of what it means to be alive in this world,” Stone muses, “I want to get it not right but near.” With her signature incisive perspective, Stone debates the paradoxes of finding one’s own self amid parenthood, global change, and the constant press of mortality.
In these fifty-one poems, Stone seamlessly ties together allusions to Jordan Peele’s Nope, Rilke’s elegies, and other cultural touchstones to arrive at new revelations. With fluidity and wryness, she brings readers to the brink of psychic wounds, operatic dramas, and strange dreams, with a fresh narrative in the rich mytho-poetic tradition.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Stone (What Is Otherwise Infinite) announces the chief preoccupation of her ruminative fourth collection in the poem "Civilization and Its Discontents": "There are two apple trees in my yard/ and I am thinking of what it means to be alive in this world." She illustrates how this sometimes means alternating between the "black sunflower" of suicidal depression and ecstasy: "There's always a snowstorm coming/ and I'm always booked at a café/ on the other side of the mountain/ driving in the dark/ and I am insanely happy,/ weaving along the winding cliffs" ("Old Bio in Snow"). In "Thoughts at the Grave," the poet vividly exhumes the buried body: "In the softening box, your discarded limbs.../ morphing to wild blue phlox scattered above you./ But for some artfully yellowed dentures/ fallen back into the gritty skull." The volume's title poem plays on her own last name: "I am considering a stone./ Even alone I feel I am in another performance./ Even the near world is distant." Stone's many allusions to writers, films, philosophy, and mythology create a vibrant tapestry. The result is a psychically rich and attentive work.