“The great virtue of these poems—and it is an aesthetic as well as an ethical virtue—is to dare to regard the parlous circumstance of our moment <i>sub specie aeternitatis.</i> The results are not only indisputable. They are, almost miraculously, reassuring.” —Donald Revell, professor of English, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and author of <i>The English Boat</i><br /> <br /> “The best book in the many written by one of the best living American poets, <i>The Dove of the Morning News</i> is news that will stay news.” —Claudia Keelan, professor of English, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, editor of <i>Interim</i>, and author of eight collections of poetry, including <i>We Step into the Sea</i>
As a lens into contemporary life, the title sequence interrogates the vision of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, whose sense of our increasingly interwoven cultural conversation figures now as a premonition of the internet. If his hope for the noosphere as a fulfillment of divine promise feels problematic, it nonetheless sees our globe as an organism whose long-term survival depends on the capacity of each to forge friendship across difference, to take the health and integration of the individual as emblematic of the whole.