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Lazar Sarna

    Book Bin Baby
    The Tethered Man: Poems
    • The Tethered Man: Poems

      • 134pages
      • 5 heures de lecture

      "The Tethered Man (adnei ha-sadeh) is described as a human-like creature connected to the earth by an umbilical cord. It dies if the cord were cut, since that is its essential channel for food. Adnei ha-sadeh literally means master of the field. In ancient and medieval legends, the adnei ha-sadeh is humanoid, or an ape, or a plant-man. The creature is also known as the yadua, a wild tethered man capable of speaking but in unintelligible sounds (see chapter 8:5 of Tractate Kilayim) It is hunted by shooting arrows or spears at its cord, or taunting it to dart away from its point of connection until it yanks and snaps the cord. The creature's bones are said to be an aid to fortune-telling and communication with the dead, by placing them in the arm-pit of the seer or mouth of a corpse. The adnei ha-sadeh is either extinct or lives in the wild regions of the earth, or never existed at all."--Back cover

      The Tethered Man: Poems
    • Book Bin Baby

      • 216pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      BOOK BIN BABY is about a man whose mother was so caught up in mundane matters that she disposed of him as a baby at birth in the book bin of a library. There he is nurtured by library members, who find the library is attracting new members because of their young residents. As he grows to manhood, he adopts as his world view the notion that a moral society is based on books, which are never wrong. The novel has a comic and political undercurrent, exploring why people in power think the way they do. "Lazar Sarna is a quite unique and distinctive voice.. .." -Midwest Book Review "Sarna is that rare, perhaps anachronistic, a thing in an age of personal expression, cursory impressions, moral relativism, and ironic distance: a poet who wears the mantle of a prophet. That he wears it uneasily and speaks with dry humor makes his words all the more convincing. He is indeed the direct heir of something grand and important."-Quill and Quire LAZAR SARNA lives in Montreal where he practices law and teaches. He is the author of the poetry collections He Claims he is the Heir, Porcupine's Quill (2005), Letters of State, Porcupine's Quill (1978), Mystics on a Picnic, Hillel (1972), The Singsong (1968), The Tethered Man (2019) and as well as a novel The Man Who Lived Near Nelligan, Coach House Press (1975). His poetry has appeared in the anthologies Cross Cut, Vehicule Press (1982) and Jerusalem, Vehicule Press (1996).

      Book Bin Baby