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Hard-Packed Clay

Hard-Packed Clay

By Joyce Compton BrownPublisher: RedHawk PublicationsISBN: 978-1952485718Genre: PoetryPrice: $15.00
Available from: RedHawk Publications

Joyce has created a world of poetry that takes you to her roots and to her place and time. 

Joyce Compton Brown is the author of two chapbooks, Bequest (Finishing Line) and Singing with Jarred Edges (Main Street Rag) as well as Standing on the Outcrop (Redhawk Publications). She has published poetry, prose, and art. A Pushcart nominee, she wins or places in an occasional contest and has published in numerous journals. After earning degrees from Appalachian State University and the University of Southern Mississippi, she taught at Gardner-Webb University for a number of years, using summer opportunities for further study in Appalachian culture, roots music, and poetry at Berea College, Hindman Institute, and Appalachian State University. She loves the history carried in music of the commonplace and spends time sketching mostly the old and decrepit. A current major focus is the interconnectedness between ancient cultures and our own times. She lives in Troutman, NC with her husband and cat.

Reviews

These elegiac poems plumb the depths of loss, but the beauty and craft in their making, the honoring of lived lives, achieves, as the author hopes, “the heart’s resurgent beat of hope.” Like Yeats, Joyce Brown is the rare poet whose work achieves more power after youth and middle-age. Hard-Packed Clay is a marvel.

Ron Rash, author of Serena

Joyce Compton Brown’s captivating Hard-Packed Clay is a kind of family reunion, elucidating as any traditional Southern Decoration where visitation at gravesites is both with the living and the dead—“This graveyard is a storybook.” Meeting there are those of the past belonging to an incorrigible religion/community and those of the present who are more tolerant. Stories told at such gatherings involve the struggles of progenitors, duel edged with hope for a better future. Each poem holds a handful of red dirt from a farm abandoned for industrial jobs and their own brand of hardship. Eventually, sterile dirt, rejuvenated by the souls of so many, springs forth what was once removed from the old home place environment— purple irises, bluebirds, and meadowlarks.

Hilda Downer

In Hard-Packed Clay, Joyce Compton Brown delivers a meticulously detailed portrait of the South Iredell farm community where she grew up. There is beauty, heartbreak, and everything in between on these pages. Clay finds Brown at the height of her poetic power, avoiding the temptation of nostalgia, yet crafting her narratives with warmth and candor.

Tim Peeler, author of First Season