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  <title><![CDATA[What Love Comes To: New and Selected Poems]]></title>
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  <description><![CDATA[<p>&quot;We may pull down the shades in order to get on with things, but [Ruth] Stone pulls them up to remind us that the real stuff of life isn't about to disappear.&quot;-<em>The New York Times Book Review</em></p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> gathers nearly half a century of poems from a National Book Award-winning poet who, over the course of her career, has written in a wide range of voices and forms. Drawing from eleven previous volumes, this collection offers a trajectory through that career, presenting Ruth Stone from her early formal lyrics, through fierce feminist and political poems, to her most recent meditations on blindness and aging. Stone, at age ninety-two, returns often to the theme of loss in her work, all the while maintaining what the Vermont poet laureate nominations committee calls &quot;a sense of survival surpassing poverty and grief. . . . Her poetry's irrepressible humor and intellectual curiosity are unique among contemporary American poets.&quot;</p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> is the perfect entry point into Stone's world of serious laughter; of uncertainty and insight; of mystery and acceptance.</p><p><em>When I forget to weep, <br/>I hear the peeping tree toads<br/>creeping up the bark. <br/>Love lies asleep<br/>and dreams that everything<br/>is in its golden net; <br/>and I am caught there, too, <br/>when I forget.</em></p><p>A recipient of the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award, <strong>Ruth Stone</strong> has taught at numerous American universities. The author of eleven books of poetry, she has lived in Vermont since 1957.</p>]]></description>
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    <![CDATA[<p>&quot;We may pull down the shades in order to get on with things, but [Ruth] Stone pulls them up to remind us that the real stuff of life isn't about to disappear.&quot;-<em>The New York Times Book Review</em></p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> gathers nearly half a century of poems from a National Book Award-winning poet who, over the course of her career, has written in a wide range of voices and forms. Drawing from eleven previous volumes, this collection offers a trajectory through that career, presenting Ruth Stone from her early formal lyrics, through fierce feminist and political poems, to her most recent meditations on blindness and aging. Stone, at age ninety-two, returns often to the theme of loss in her work, all the while maintaining what the Vermont poet laureate nominations committee calls &quot;a sense of survival surpassing poverty and grief. . . . Her poetry's irrepressible humor and intellectual curiosity are unique among contemporary American poets.&quot;</p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> is the perfect entry point into Stone's world of serious laughter; of uncertainty and insight; of mystery and acceptance.</p><p><em>When I forget to weep, <br/>I hear the peeping tree toads<br/>creeping up the bark. <br/>Love lies asleep<br/>and dreams that everything<br/>is in its golden net; <br/>and I am caught there, too, <br/>when I forget.</em></p><p>A recipient of the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award, <strong>Ruth Stone</strong> has taught at numerous American universities. The author of eleven books of poetry, she has lived in Vermont since 1957.</p>]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[In ethos and ribald spirit she sometimes strikes me as the female counterpart to Jim Harrison, with a dash of late great Kunitz, but an altogether facinating poet who on the whole doesn't write like anyone else but Ruth Stone. At times her humor also reminds me, though not too often for its own good...<a href="http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/25803742">more...</a>]]></body>
    
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    <![CDATA[<p>&quot;We may pull down the shades in order to get on with things, but [Ruth] Stone pulls them up to remind us that the real stuff of life isn't about to disappear.&quot;-<em>The New York Times Book Review</em></p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> gathers nearly half a century of poems from a National Book Award-winning poet who, over the course of her career, has written in a wide range of voices and forms. Drawing from eleven previous volumes, this collection offers a trajectory through that career, presenting Ruth Stone from her early formal lyrics, through fierce feminist and political poems, to her most recent meditations on blindness and aging. Stone, at age ninety-two, returns often to the theme of loss in her work, all the while maintaining what the Vermont poet laureate nominations committee calls &quot;a sense of survival surpassing poverty and grief. . . . Her poetry's irrepressible humor and intellectual curiosity are unique among contemporary American poets.&quot;</p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> is the perfect entry point into Stone's world of serious laughter; of uncertainty and insight; of mystery and acceptance.</p><p><em>When I forget to weep, <br/>I hear the peeping tree toads<br/>creeping up the bark. <br/>Love lies asleep<br/>and dreams that everything<br/>is in its golden net; <br/>and I am caught there, too, <br/>when I forget.</em></p><p>A recipient of the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award, <strong>Ruth Stone</strong> has taught at numerous American universities. The author of eleven books of poetry, she has lived in Vermont since 1957.</p>]]>
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    <![CDATA[<p>&quot;We may pull down the shades in order to get on with things, but [Ruth] Stone pulls them up to remind us that the real stuff of life isn't about to disappear.&quot;-<em>The New York Times Book Review</em></p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> gathers nearly half a century of poems from a National Book Award-winning poet who, over the course of her career, has written in a wide range of voices and forms. Drawing from eleven previous volumes, this collection offers a trajectory through that career, presenting Ruth Stone from her early formal lyrics, through fierce feminist and political poems, to her most recent meditations on blindness and aging. Stone, at age ninety-two, returns often to the theme of loss in her work, all the while maintaining what the Vermont poet laureate nominations committee calls &quot;a sense of survival surpassing poverty and grief. . . . Her poetry's irrepressible humor and intellectual curiosity are unique among contemporary American poets.&quot;</p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> is the perfect entry point into Stone's world of serious laughter; of uncertainty and insight; of mystery and acceptance.</p><p><em>When I forget to weep, <br/>I hear the peeping tree toads<br/>creeping up the bark. <br/>Love lies asleep<br/>and dreams that everything<br/>is in its golden net; <br/>and I am caught there, too, <br/>when I forget.</em></p><p>A recipient of the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award, <strong>Ruth Stone</strong> has taught at numerous American universities. The author of eleven books of poetry, she has lived in Vermont since 1957.</p>]]>
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    <![CDATA[<p>&quot;We may pull down the shades in order to get on with things, but [Ruth] Stone pulls them up to remind us that the real stuff of life isn't about to disappear.&quot;-<em>The New York Times Book Review</em></p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> gathers nearly half a century of poems from a National Book Award-winning poet who, over the course of her career, has written in a wide range of voices and forms. Drawing from eleven previous volumes, this collection offers a trajectory through that career, presenting Ruth Stone from her early formal lyrics, through fierce feminist and political poems, to her most recent meditations on blindness and aging. Stone, at age ninety-two, returns often to the theme of loss in her work, all the while maintaining what the Vermont poet laureate nominations committee calls &quot;a sense of survival surpassing poverty and grief. . . . Her poetry's irrepressible humor and intellectual curiosity are unique among contemporary American poets.&quot;</p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> is the perfect entry point into Stone's world of serious laughter; of uncertainty and insight; of mystery and acceptance.</p><p><em>When I forget to weep, <br/>I hear the peeping tree toads<br/>creeping up the bark. <br/>Love lies asleep<br/>and dreams that everything<br/>is in its golden net; <br/>and I am caught there, too, <br/>when I forget.</em></p><p>A recipient of the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award, <strong>Ruth Stone</strong> has taught at numerous American universities. The author of eleven books of poetry, she has lived in Vermont since 1957.</p>]]>
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    <![CDATA[<p>&quot;We may pull down the shades in order to get on with things, but [Ruth] Stone pulls them up to remind us that the real stuff of life isn't about to disappear.&quot;-<em>The New York Times Book Review</em></p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> gathers nearly half a century of poems from a National Book Award-winning poet who, over the course of her career, has written in a wide range of voices and forms. Drawing from eleven previous volumes, this collection offers a trajectory through that career, presenting Ruth Stone from her early formal lyrics, through fierce feminist and political poems, to her most recent meditations on blindness and aging. Stone, at age ninety-two, returns often to the theme of loss in her work, all the while maintaining what the Vermont poet laureate nominations committee calls &quot;a sense of survival surpassing poverty and grief. . . . Her poetry's irrepressible humor and intellectual curiosity are unique among contemporary American poets.&quot;</p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> is the perfect entry point into Stone's world of serious laughter; of uncertainty and insight; of mystery and acceptance.</p><p><em>When I forget to weep, <br/>I hear the peeping tree toads<br/>creeping up the bark. <br/>Love lies asleep<br/>and dreams that everything<br/>is in its golden net; <br/>and I am caught there, too, <br/>when I forget.</em></p><p>A recipient of the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award, <strong>Ruth Stone</strong> has taught at numerous American universities. The author of eleven books of poetry, she has lived in Vermont since 1957.</p>]]>
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    <![CDATA[<p>&quot;We may pull down the shades in order to get on with things, but [Ruth] Stone pulls them up to remind us that the real stuff of life isn't about to disappear.&quot;-<em>The New York Times Book Review</em></p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> gathers nearly half a century of poems from a National Book Award-winning poet who, over the course of her career, has written in a wide range of voices and forms. Drawing from eleven previous volumes, this collection offers a trajectory through that career, presenting Ruth Stone from her early formal lyrics, through fierce feminist and political poems, to her most recent meditations on blindness and aging. Stone, at age ninety-two, returns often to the theme of loss in her work, all the while maintaining what the Vermont poet laureate nominations committee calls &quot;a sense of survival surpassing poverty and grief. . . . Her poetry's irrepressible humor and intellectual curiosity are unique among contemporary American poets.&quot;</p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> is the perfect entry point into Stone's world of serious laughter; of uncertainty and insight; of mystery and acceptance.</p><p><em>When I forget to weep, <br/>I hear the peeping tree toads<br/>creeping up the bark. <br/>Love lies asleep<br/>and dreams that everything<br/>is in its golden net; <br/>and I am caught there, too, <br/>when I forget.</em></p><p>A recipient of the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award, <strong>Ruth Stone</strong> has taught at numerous American universities. The author of eleven books of poetry, she has lived in Vermont since 1957.</p>]]>
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    <![CDATA[<p>&quot;We may pull down the shades in order to get on with things, but [Ruth] Stone pulls them up to remind us that the real stuff of life isn't about to disappear.&quot;-<em>The New York Times Book Review</em></p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> gathers nearly half a century of poems from a National Book Award-winning poet who, over the course of her career, has written in a wide range of voices and forms. Drawing from eleven previous volumes, this collection offers a trajectory through that career, presenting Ruth Stone from her early formal lyrics, through fierce feminist and political poems, to her most recent meditations on blindness and aging. Stone, at age ninety-two, returns often to the theme of loss in her work, all the while maintaining what the Vermont poet laureate nominations committee calls &quot;a sense of survival surpassing poverty and grief. . . . Her poetry's irrepressible humor and intellectual curiosity are unique among contemporary American poets.&quot;</p><p><em>What Love Comes To</em> is the perfect entry point into Stone's world of serious laughter; of uncertainty and insight; of mystery and acceptance.</p><p><em>When I forget to weep, <br/>I hear the peeping tree toads<br/>creeping up the bark. <br/>Love lies asleep<br/>and dreams that everything<br/>is in its golden net; <br/>and I am caught there, too, <br/>when I forget.</em></p><p>A recipient of the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award, <strong>Ruth Stone</strong> has taught at numerous American universities. The author of eleven books of poetry, she has lived in Vermont since 1957.</p>]]>
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