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PENNSYLVANIA FURNACE by Julie Swarstad Johnson



About this edition:
Poetry, 91 pages. 6.00" x 8.25" softcover, Smyth-sewn binding.
ISBN 978-0-87775-058-1. Released 15 November 2019.

About this edition:
Poetry, 91 pages. 6.125" x 8.500" hardcover, Smyth-sewn binding.
ISBN 978-0-87775-059-8. With dust jacket. Released 15 November 2019.

About this edition:
Poetry, 91 pages. 6.125" x 8.500" hardcover, Smyth-sewn binding.
ISBN 978-0-87775-059-8. Signed, with dust jacket. Released 15 November 2019.

ADVANCE PRAISE for Pennsylvania Furnace:

“In poems quietly fierce, meticulously observed, faithfully rendered, musically tempered; in the uncanny ability to evoke both the presence of the past, its once molten iron, and its abandonment by time, Julie Swarstad Johnson raises a ‘host of silent voices praising every shadow.’ In these graceful poems, Claudia Emerson has found an heir. Pennsylvania Furnace is fired by the haunting beauty and revelation of its resonant images, ‘finding use / not in the thing itself, but in what / it opened...’” —ELEANOR WILNER, Before Our Eyes: New and Selected Poems, 1975-2017

“As Julie Swarstad Johnson journeys east from present-day Arizona, her poems travel both geography and time, arriving in a pre-Civil War Pennsylvania crowded with steel mills and ironworks. There, other voices rise up to join hers, allowing the poet to plumb experiences beyond those of her singular self—a woodcutter struggling to support her family cord by cord, an ironmaster’s daughter trading the fetters of her father for those of a husband. Built on careful research and evocative place-based observations, Pennsylvania Furnace is a book of incandescent intelligence that searches and burns bright as the sunshot furnace of the desert, as the smelter’s molten ore.” —JESSICA JACOBS, Take Me with You, Wherever You’re Going

JULIE SWARSTAD JOHNSON lives in Tucson, Arizona. She is the author of the poetry chapbook Jumping the Pit and has served as Artist in Residence at Gettysburg National Military Park. She works at the University of Arizona Poetry Center.