Clarkesworld Books New and Used Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror

View Cart

This bookstore shut down last year, but we're temporarily open again for orders of $35 or more. Orders will typically be shipped on Tuesday and Saturday. We've cut prices on most of our inventory and magazines. Shipping is a flat rate of $3.50 media mail for US orders.

The point of re-opening is to clear out the remaining inventory that is filling our house. At present, I'm trying to get rid of enough inventory to allow our children to move into a larger bedroom, currently used as storage. So, don't just look at it as simply buying books, you're making two little boys very happy.

 


   

An Open Book
by Orson Scott Card

Hardcover

Publisher: Subterranean Press (2003)
ISBN: 193108193X

List Price: $25.00
Our Price: $15.00


Description:

"This is an open book in two senses of the term.

It is open because it is a work in progress. Over the years I have tinkered with most of these poems many times and have revised some of them quite thoroughly. Their publication here does not mean I am done with them.

Yet there are some poems which I have not altered in years, not because they are perfect, but because they reflect my intention at the time I wrote them. Just because I have changed into a different man with the passage of years does not mean I should expunge the traces of my earlier self that these poems represent.

So this open book is a collection of the poems I happened to choose for publication at this time, in the form I happen to prefer at the moment.

This book is open in another sense, however. Since the days of Ezra Pound and T.S. Eliot, poetry has been steadily dying as a public art form, because poets, taught to value obscurity and difficulty, have labored to make their verse less and less accessible to untrained readers.

I see little point in creating verse that has no readers except a tiny club who have learned a private code.

Anyone can be obscure -- all you have to do to achieve obscurity is to write incompetently.

To be clear and yet also say something worth saying is what I believe poets should strive for. The first reading should reward the reader. If later readings reveal new insights, so much the better; but if the first reading did not achieve Dryden’s recipe of sweetness and light, why should a reader return for a second pass?"

-- Orson Scott Card

Questions or Comments: books@clarkesworld.com
Web design by Clarkesworld

Search New Books Used Paperbacks Magazines Signed Limited Editions Ordering Information Mailing List Search New Books Used Paperbacks Magazines Signed Limited Editions Ordering Information Mailing List