Lost and Found by Andrew Merton

lost and found by andrew mertonWe are proud to announce Lost and Found by Andrew Merton. It is currently available at the Accents store.

Merton’s first book, Evidence that We Are Descended from Chairs (Accents Publishing, was named Outstanding Book of Poetry for 2013-2014 by the New Hampshire Writers’ Project. Lost and Found continues the poignant, personable humor from this first work, but adds a confessional flavor that gives his new work a more nonfictional feel.

 

Praise for Andrew Merton’s poetry

Almost every one of his poems has a surprise waiting for the reader, either some astonishing figure of speech or a witty observation we are not likely to forget anytime soon.

Charles Simic

Andrew Merton has masterfully condensed his life into potent, brilliantly composed, minimalist snapshots. Chronologically arranged, delicately layered, and driven by savage honesty and subtle tenderness, Lost and Found is an intense injection of love, loss, loneliness, and above all, the unrelenting question of one’s existence. I’ll slot this on my shelf next to Raymond Carver.

—Jessica Bell

This poet pinpoints the extraordinary in the day to day; he makes the reader see things anew, and even when they appear tawdry and tough, they are rich and sweet. The calm and gentle voice of these poems is nevertheless fierce in its focus on life, aging,disappointment and death, and that makes for the tremendous tension that keeps each poem taut with drama, inviting from the very first line, and powerfully moving until its conclusion.

John Skoyles

This marvelous book—ruefully charming on one page, charmingly rueful on the next—goes cradle to grave in its coverage of a lifetime’s worth of erratic heartbeats. I love Merton’s poems for how they completely dissolve the thin line between bafflement and amazement. Their story is the story of a most companionable endurance, with no pun left unspoken. A deeply humane, entertaining, wise book.

David Rivard

 

Fifth Grade Air Raid Drill, 1955

I tell Mr. Carter there’s a crack in the ant farm,
but he has more important things to talk about today:

After the bomb, trees will wither, milk will glow.
You might live a year before the insects get you

but first you have to survive the blast.
Duck under your desks

and stick your heads between your knees.
I pretend to do as I’m told.

When he turns his back I crawl away
on six legs, triumphant.

Andrew Merton,
Lost and Found
(Accents Publishing)

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