Reviews tagging 'Animal death'

Devotions: The Selected Poems of Mary Oliver by Mary Oliver

18 reviews

prynne31's review

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hopeful inspiring reflective slow-paced

4.0

So interesting to see such a great representation of an author's ouvre. A bit exhausting too.

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kuromium's review

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hopeful inspiring reflective relaxing slow-paced

4.5


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voidboi's review

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emotional hopeful inspiring reflective relaxing sad slow-paced

3.5

Maybe not the best way to start reading Mary Oliver- this is a large book, with a very tight focus on nature and spiritual subjects. I think it was a great collection, and I appreciated the way it spanned her career of writing, but I think a single volume instead of selections from all of her volumes would have held my attention more. The choice to go backwards chronologically was interesting, but I found that I preferred her later work, and I think it should have been reversed.

That said, Mary Oliver was an amazing poet. I loved viewing the world through her attentive eye, being touched and surprised by the connections she weaves, and feeling her deep love for nature and humanity.  

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calaveritas's review

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emotional hopeful inspiring reflective slow-paced

5.0


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laurenleigh's review

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emotional inspiring reflective sad slow-paced

4.5

Finally finished all the poems in this anthology! Oliver herself chose which poems to feature from her decades-long career, and I found it interesting that she decided to move backwards—starting with her more recent work. I put sticky note flags on the poems that struck me, which will be fun to revisit at some point. I realized a poem’s skill or beauty was only a partial factor in when I marked it. So much of it is whether it found me at the right moment. There are certainly times where the poems felt boring or repetitive. When I’m not in the right headspace, I’m like “Okay Mary, we get it, nature is cool.” But when I am in a place ready to receive, I found a lot of joy in the non-dualistic nature of Oliver’s work. One of the biggest messages I kept encountering is that we are not separate from nature, though our egos and modern culture like to think otherwise. I am no different from or better than a bird, a pond, a blade of grass. The poems that spoke to this most were the ones most often noted down.

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dizzyindecision's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful inspiring reflective slow-paced

5.0


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maria_s's review

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inspiring reflective relaxing slow-paced

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for_esme_with_love's review

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hopeful inspiring reflective relaxing medium-paced

5.0

Mary Oliver reminds me that this mysterious, tragic, joyful life is worth living. "Benjamin, Who Came From Who Knows Where" might be my all-time favorite poem. 

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