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Ben Lerner

    4 febbraio 1979

    Ben Lerner è un poeta, romanziere e critico americano la cui opera interroga spesso l'intersezione tra l'esperienza personale e le correnti culturali e intellettuali più ampie. La sua poesia è caratterizzata da una tagliente introspezione e da un'esplorazione del linguaggio come strumento per comprendere il mondo. Nella sua narrativa, Lerner indaga delicatamente le complessità dell'identità, dell'arte e del loro rapporto con la realtà. La sua scrittura è celebrata per la sua intelligenza, sensibilità e innovazione formale, spingendo i lettori a riflettere su come percepiamo e rappresentiamo noi stessi e il mondo che ci circonda.

    Ben Lerner
    No Art
    Mean Free Path
    The Lichtenberg Figures
    The Maximized Living Bible
    Gold Custody
    One Minute Wellness
    • One Minute Wellness

      The Natural Health & Happiness System That Never Fails

      • 274pagine
      • 10 ore di lettura

      Focusing on self-improvement, this book offers strategies to enhance overall well-being without relying on medications. It presents practical techniques for revitalizing health and wellness, complemented by a fictional story that demonstrates the authors' methods in relatable scenarios. This narrative serves as inspiration, motivating readers to implement these strategies in their own lives for a more fulfilling existence.

      One Minute Wellness
    • "Barbara Bloom and Ben Lerner share a fascination with intricate dramas of framing and reframing: what happens to an image or a phrase when it is re-encountered, recontextualized, recombined -- when a particular frame of reference is established or collapses? How is meaning accrued or eroded through repetition, across pages or generations? How are images or sentences enlisted in -- or suddenly freed from -- the construction of our personal and collective mythologies? In this collaborative book, bringing together Bloom's artworks and Lerner's prose poems, these questions are rendered beautiful as they are sensitively felt, veering between the promises of abstraction -- 'the showroom of grammar, its glitter and ghosts,' collective nouns, songs without lyrics that everyone can sing -- and verbal and visual languages of extreme privacy. Other topics include: false fathers, lice, stone fruit, Casper Rappaport, color words, alephs, forever stamps, and Goethe's corridor"--Publisher's website.

      Gold Custody
    • Learn how to live a well-balanced life through practical articles and devotions from Dr. Ben Lerner and members of the Global Pastors Network such as Dr. Jack Hayford and Dr. Gary Smalley, plus leaders such as Bill McCartney, Dr. Gary Chapman, and Darlene Zschech. As you read through this Bible, you will see that God's plan for our lives is that we be well physically, emotionally, financially, and spiritually - and without unmanageable stress! This unique Bible will enrich your daily lifestyle while equipping you to be a healthier you.

      The Maximized Living Bible
    • The Lichtenberg Figures, winner of the Hayden Carruth Award, is an unconventional sonnet sequence that interrogates the relationship between language and memory, violence and form. “Lichtenberg figures” are fern-like electrical patterns that can appear on (and quickly fade from) the bodies of people struck by lightning. Throughout this playful and elegiac debut—with its flashes of autobiography, intellection, comedy, and critique—the vocabulary of academic theory collides with American slang and the idiom of the Old Testament meets the jargon of the Internet to display an eclectic sensibility. Ben Lerner, the youngest poet ever published by Copper Canyon Press, is co-founder of No: a journal of the arts. He earned an MFA from Brown University and is currently a Fulbright scholar in Spain.

      The Lichtenberg Figures
    • Mean Free Path

      • 69pagine
      • 3 ore di lettura

      National Book Award finalist Ben Lerner turns to science once again for his guiding metaphor. “Mean free path” is the average distance a particle travels before colliding with another particle. The poems in Lerner’s third collection are full of layered collisions—repetitions, fragmentations, stutters, re-combinations—that track how language threatens to break up or change course under the emotional pressures of the utterance. And then there’s the larger collision of love, and while Lerner questions whether love poems are even possible, he composes a gorgeous, symphonic, and complicated one.You startled me. I thought you were sleepingIn the traditional sense. I like lookingAt anything under glass, especiallyGlass. You called me. Like overheardDreams. I’m writing this one as a womanComfortable with failure. I promise I will neverBut the predicate withered. If you areUncomfortable seeing this as portraitureClose your eyes. No, you startledBen Lerner is the author of three books of poetry and was named a finalist for the National Book Award for his second book, Angle of Yaw. He holds degrees from Brown University, co-founded No: a journal of the arts, and teaches at the University of Pittsburgh.

      Mean Free Path
    • From the author of the bestselling novels Leaving the Atocha Station and 10:04, here is a dazzling collection of award-winning poetry - available for the first time to readers beyond the US.

      No Art
    • 10:04

      • 256pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      In the past year, the narrator of 10:04 has enjoyed unexpected literary success, been diagnosed with a potentially fatal heart condition, and been asked by his best friend to help her conceive a child. Now, in a New York of increasingly frequent superstorms and political unrest, he must reckon with his biological mortality, the possibility of a literary afterlife, and the prospect of (unconventional) fatherhood in a city that might soon be under water. In prose that Jonathan Franzen has called 'hilarious...cracklingly intelligent...and original in every sentence', Lerner's new novel charts an exhilarating course through the contemporary landscape of sex, friendship, memory, art and politics, and captures what it is like to be alive right now.

      10:04
    • The Topeka School

      • 304pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      Adam Gordon is a senior at Topeka High School, class of '97. His mother, Jane, is a famous feminist author; his father, Jonathan, is an expert at getting "lost boys" to open up. They both work at a psychiatric clinic that has attracted staff and patients from around the world. Adam is a renowned debater, expected to win a national championship before he heads to college. He is one of the cool kids, ready to fight or, better, freestyle about fighting if it keeps his peers from thinking of him as weak. Adam is also one of the seniors who bring the loner Darren Eberheart--who is, unbeknownst to Adam, his fathers' patient--into the social scene, to disastrous effect. Deftly shifting perspectives and time periods, The Topeka School is the story of one family's struggles and strengths: Jane's reckoning with the legacy of an abusive father, Jonathan's marital transgressions, the challenge of raising a good son in a culture of toxic masculinity. It is also a riveting prehistory of the present: the collapse of public speech, the trolls and tyrants of the New Right, and the ongoing crisis of identity among white men

      The Topeka School