Publisher: Mercer University Press
		
			 
		
				
            Product Code: P503
        
			 
		
				
			ISBN: 9780881465235
		
			 
				
								
					
        
        
        
				 
            Price: $18.00
        
			 
        
				
            Moving and filled with unexpected ideas and imagery, The Color of All Things is a love letter from one man to one woman, but it offers love from each of us to all of us. Brimming with a touching and generous joy, this is a book of everyday needs that can only be filled with a genuine and lasting love. This is the third volume of poetry from Philip Lee Williams, following on his Elegies for the Water and his national book of the year (Books and Culture magazine) The Flower Seeker: An Epic Poem of William Bartram. Like his other volumes of poetry, The Color of All Things moves slowly through the natural world without sentimentality but with surefooted grace and lovely rhythms. Georgia poet laureate Judson Mitcham says that in Williams’s poetry we hear “the distinctive voice of a poet who knows how to tell the stories that matter, how to hold still and take a good look at the natural world and let himself be filled with praise, a poet who knows how to find the right prayer and how to pray it.” 
        
			  
       
    
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
                         
                     | 
		
			
                        
                            
 
   
   
   
   
    
     
        
        
        
        
        
		
				
			Publisher: Mercer University Press
		
			 
		
				
            Product Code: P561
        
			 
		
				
			ISBN: 9780881466522
		
			 
				
								
					
        
        
        
				 
            Price: $16.00
        
			 
        
				
            In her first collection of poems, Sara Pirkle Hughes explores the role memory plays in shaping identity and a person’s perception of the past. The book’s title, THE DISAPPEARING ACT, posits that time is a magician causing every moment in a person's life to disappear, and every poem in the collection is the poet's attempt to recapture what has vanished, while also acknowledging the inherent paradox of writing about the past. The fallible nature of memory makes it impossible to preserve an experience free of distortion. 
        
			  
       
    
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
                         
                     | 
		
			
                        
                            
 
   
   
   
   
    
     
        
        
        
        
        
		
				
			Publisher: Mercer University Press
		
			 
		
				
            Product Code: P544
        
			 
		
				
			ISBN: 9780881466157
		
			 
				
								
					
        
        
        
				 
            Price: $18.00
        
			 
        
				
            Part memoir, part essay collection, part spiritual journal, THIS GLADDENING LIGHT offers a unique perspective on the interconnectedness of universal themes--doubt and devotion, childhood and parenthood, disconnection and ecological mindfulness, anguish and empathy--all told at the level of the ground. 
This much-anticipated nonfiction debut from Christopher Martin is, ultimately, a work of belonging. Through narrative prose that moves between a rain-soaked Appalachian cove, Thoreau’s hut site at Walden Pond, hospital rooms in Atlanta and Cherokee County, Civil War battlefields crossed by highways, and the suburbanized, ore-red hills of Northwest Georgia, Martin paints a spirituality of the ordinary, of the creaturely world. 
        
			  
       
    
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
                         
                     | 
		
			
                        
                            
 
   
   
   
   
    
     
        
        
        
        
        
		
				
			Publisher: Mercer University Press
		
			 
		
				
            Product Code: P581
        
			 
		
				
			ISBN: 9780881467024
		
			 
				
								
					
        
        
        
				 
            Price: $17.00
        
			 
        
				
            THROUGH THE NEEDLE'S EYE is told through the authentic voice of Jessie, a precocious girl raised in the Blue Ridge Foothills of Southern Appalachia after World War II. Saddled with an alcoholic narcissistic father and a passive mother, Jessie is charged with mothering her siblings as generational curses and poverty never cease to overwhelm her family. As providence would have it, Granny Isabelle sets her eagle eye upon Jessie, the child neither parents nor teachers think worthwhile.
        
			  
       
    
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
                         
                     | 
		
			
                        
                            
 
   
   
   
   
    
     
        
        
        
        
        
		
				
			Publisher: Mercer University Press
		
			 
		
				
            Product Code: P616
        
			 
		
				
			ISBN: 9780881467765
		
			 
				
								
					
        
        
        
				 
            Price: $16.00
        
			 
        
				
            Born and raised in Ohio, Shuly Xóchitl Cawood moved to the South over two decades ago and has also lived and traveled in her mother's native country of Mexico. She writes about all of these places in her debut poetry collection, TROUBLE CAN BE SO BEAUTIFUL AT THE BEGINNING, using their landscape and culture as a backdrop and a contrast to consider her identity and what it means to migrate from one location to another, how a place's values and societal expectations can shape who you are and who you become, and how you can be both a part of something and apart from it.
        
			  
       
    
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
                         
                     | 
		
			
                        
                            
 
   
   
   
   
    
     
        
        
        
        
        
		
				
			Publisher: Mercer University Press
		
			 
		
				
            Product Code: P648
        
			 
		
				
			ISBN: 9780881468540
		
			 
				
								
					
        
        
        
				 
            Price: $17.00
        
			 
        
				
            WHERE YOU COME FROM IS GONE examines the economic and racial violence of rural America, where whiteness is a fraught and often dysfunctional identity. It is a poetic attempt at a "blues line" or a bluegrass "breakdown" to embody a lush, dangerous, and often damaged American landscape as well as the resilience of the human spirit in the face of blunt labor and white supremacy.
        
			  
       
    
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
                         
                     |