Shadow Work: Poems

Author:   Daniel Warner ,  Chris West ,  Nicolas Delort
Publisher:   Daniel Warner
ISBN:  

9781950495030


Pages:   114
Publication Date:   15 August 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Shadow Work: Poems


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Overview

Shadow Work is an exploration of the shadow self, which refers to an unconscious aspect of the self that the ego does not identify. Shadow Work realizes the actual awakening of his shadow self. Much like how in Jungian psychology encountering one's shadow is central to the process of individuation, Warner invokes memories of his father and their complicated relationship, as well as other traumas and triumphs that have collectively formed his shadow. The reader steps into the light with Warner as he reconciles the unshakable and the formerly unspeakable with his hopes and dreams of a boundless future. Shadow Work is a poetic narrative of baptism by fire and subsequent rebirth.

Full Product Details

Author:   Daniel Warner ,  Chris West ,  Nicolas Delort
Publisher:   Daniel Warner
Imprint:   Daniel Warner
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.70cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.177kg
ISBN:  

9781950495030


ISBN 10:   1950495035
Pages:   114
Publication Date:   15 August 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Shadow Work is an exploration of the shadow self, which refers to an unconscious aspect of the self that the ego does not identify. In his first poetry book Woke, Warner's surrealist writing style paints a vivid picture of dreamscapes and phantasmagorias. Ironically, however, his sophomore effort Shadow Work realizes the actual awakening of his shadow self. Much like how in Jungian psychology encountering one's shadow is central to the process of individuation, Warner invokes memories of his father and their complicated relationship, as well as other traumas and triumphs that have collectively formed his shadow. The reader steps into the light with Warner as he reconciles the unshakable and the formerly unspeakable with his hopes and dreams of a boundless future. Shadow Work is a poetic narrative of baptism by fire and subsequent rebirth. - Connor Garrett In this thoughtful and surreal collection, nature dreams and hypnotizes; Warner pays careful attention to sound and soundlessness, to the self and the world, the distance between the thing and the thought of it. Shadow Work is for the reader who needs night and silence and a sense of safety. It will help you crawl out of the life you have been painting. - Danielle Zaccagnino


In this thoughtful and surreal collection, nature dreams and hypnotizes; Warner pays careful attention to sound and soundlessness, to the self and the world, the distance between the thing and the thought of it. Shadow Work is for the reader who needs night and silence and a sense of safety. It will help you crawl out of the life you have been painting. - Danielle Zaccagnino Shadow Work is a wild and haunting investigation of the self with turns of phrase that forbid as they delight. Warner uses language as a metaphor for creation: the creation of the self, the creation of the memories that build the self, the creation of an other as we hold up unwieldy mirrors to the world. In Shadow Work, words are the arbiter of memories, which bleed into each other in Warner's dreamy meditations on childhood, suburbia, self discovery. And words force meaning out of the silent and indifferent churn of nature. Stagnant mornings that twitch alive with the first cup of coffee, that lock into the ordinary with their familiar parables of survival, that sometimes produce little resistances and beauties, which Warner observes with a playful gaze. And yet the play doesn't seem like play at all. Shadow Work deftly conveys a world weariness, something yelping at dawn as the night becomes day, and then another day. Shadow Work ultimately leads us through a landscape of hunger so we may arrive sated. The hunger for an absent father leads us to the desire to be present. The grasping at a memory that explains nothing leads us to sit with the dramas unfolding before us. The need for self possession, and Warner's dedication to self excavation, is at the heart of Shadow Work as the world unfolds and folds, collapses and expands, obscures and reveals. - germ lynn Shadow Work is a haunting collection of pensive poetry that should garner Daniel Warner both attention and respect in the world of verse. He blends the modern and the mystical, offering up eloquent metaphors and thought-provoking, gut-shot lines that resonate and build through each poem. This collection is an existential carousel and a dark love note to life, with the occasional slice of humor between reverent pondering. Bouncing from the mundane microcosm to the deepest mysteries, Warner asks hard questions, demanding attention and patience, but rewarding both, as only good poetry can. Self-Publishing Review With this debut collection, Warner deftly constructs free verse that can leave the reader hanging, haunted like its author, or resolve all problems in a few well-chosen words. He may make rational observations, such as that Fall's coming appears as a leaving (from Wayah Bald ), or plunge into verbal rhapsody: Aureole of white moonlight stands next to reaching pines (from Sky Painted with Leaves ). As his shadow self, Warner seems truly disturbed, referring once to a companion's head as an island in fog and creating a vivid, at times bitterly humorous encounter with Jack London in a bar, converting the famous creator of White Fang into a wolf and the poet's wife into a wolfish female who has a roving eye. As Warner gradually emerges into awareness and integration, a colder portrait of the man I've called father emerges, combined with a quietly optimistic view of better experiences to come. Those who appreciate poems of subtle vision and deep, at times agonizing, self-exploration will savor Warner's work. US Review of Books


In this thoughtful and surreal collection, nature dreams and hypnotizes; Warner pays careful attention to sound and soundlessness, to the self and the world, the distance between the thing and the thought of it. Shadow Work is for the reader who needs night and silence and a sense of safety. It will help you crawl out of the life you have been painting. Danielle Zaccagnino, Poetry Editor Third Point PRess Shadow Work is a wild and haunting investigation of the self with turns of phrase that forbid as they delight. Warner uses language as a metaphor for creation: the creation of the self, the creation of the memories that build the self, the creation of an other as we hold up unwieldy mirrors to the world. In Shadow Work, words are the arbiter of memories, which bleed into each other in Warner's dreamy meditations on childhood, suburbia, self discovery. And words force meaning out of the silent and indifferent churn of nature. Stagnant mornings that twitch alive with the first cup of coffee, that lock into the ordinary with their familiar parables of survival, that sometimes produce little resistances and beauties, which Warner observes with a playful gaze. And yet the play doesn't seem like play at all. Shadow Work deftly conveys a world weariness, something yelping at dawn as the night becomes day, and then another day. Shadow Work ultimately leads us through a landscape of hunger so we may arrive sated. The hunger for an absent father leads us to the desire to be present. The grasping at a memory that explains nothing leads us to sit with the dramas unfolding before us. The need for self possession, and Warner's dedication to self excavation, is at the heart of Shadow Work as the world unfolds and folds, collapses and expands, obscures and reveals. germ lynn, author of What You Call Shadow Work is a haunting collection of pensive poetry that should garner Daniel Warner both attention and respect in the world of verse. He blends the modern and the mystical, offering up eloquent metaphors and thought-provoking, gut-shot lines that resonate and build through each poem. This collection is an existential carousel and a dark love note to life, with the occasional slice of humor between reverent pondering. Bouncing from the mundane microcosm to the deepest mysteries, Warner asks hard questions, demanding attention and patience, but rewarding both, as only good poetry can. Self-Publishing Review With this debut collection, Warner deftly constructs free verse that can leave the reader hanging, haunted like its author, or resolve all problems in a few well-chosen words. He may make rational observations, such as that Fall's coming appears as a leaving (from Wayah Bald ), or plunge into verbal rhapsody: Aureole of white moonlight stands next to reaching pines (from Sky Painted with Leaves ). As Warner gradually emerges into awareness and integration, a colder portrait of the man I've called father emerges, combined with a quietly optimistic view of better experiences to come. Those who appreciate poems of subtle vision and deep, at times agonizing, self-exploration will savor Warner's work. US Review of Books Shadow Work weaves fanciful and dark dreamscapes to impart a transformative experience of personal growth and discovery. Warner transports the reader into a psychological landscape where barriers between thoughts and reality are blurred and broken - the end result is a work with a heart of Wittgenstein, veins of Jungian psychology, all hung on the skeleton of Sylvia Plath. Chris West


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