Margins
Timber Curtain book cover
Timber Curtain
2017
First Published
4.50
Average Rating
154
Number of Pages

Timber Curtain occupies a space between ramshackle and remodel. It starts with the demolition of a house―Richard Hugo House, the Seattle literary center where Frances McCue worked, lived, and mourned her husband. From there, McCue’s poems spiral out to encompass icebergs, exorcisms, the refugee crisis, and the ethics of the place-myths we create for ourselves. The speaker is plainspoken, oracular, wry, indicting, and hopeful. Like the Seattle skyline, poems erase and recombine into a landscape forever saturated with ghosts. Several poems will be central in McCue’s upcoming (2018) documentary Where the House Was . From “The Wind Up”: The city erasing itself and the building where I find you, if I could find you, comes into focus, then out. I’m pointing to the site where you worked, the once-was place. In that gesture, a person could feel local. I could stand outside that shop and look up to where we loved each other. Frances McCue is a poet, writer, teacher, and arts instigator. From 1996–2006, she was the founding director of Richard Hugo House in Seattle and is currently a Senior Lecturer at the University of Washington. She has published four books, two of which have been finalists for the Washington State Book Award in History/General Nonfiction, and another of which won the 2011 Washington State Book Award in Poetry. Currently, McCue is producing Where the House Was, a documentary film about the demolition of the Richard Hugo House building in Seattle.

Avg Rating
4.50
Number of Ratings
18
5 STARS
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4 STARS
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3 STARS
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2 STARS
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Author

Frances McCue
Author · 4 books
Frances McCue is a writer and poet living in Seattle, where she is writer-in-residence at the University of Washington's Undergraduate Honors Program. She was the founding director of Richard Hugo House from 1996 to 2006. McCue is the author of The Stenographer's Breakfast, winner of the Barnard New Women Poets Prize."
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