SOUL BONE

Literary Center * Workshops • Literary Festival

  • Home
  • Festival
    • Overview
    • Fall 2025
    • Spring 2025
    • Fall 2024
    • Spring 2024
    • Fall 2023
    • Spring 2023
    • Fall 2022
    • Spring 2022
    • Fall 2021
    • Spring 2021
  • Workshops
    • Our Current Offerings
    • Meet Our Coalition of Writers
    • Friends of Soul Bone
  • Journal
    • Soul Bone Journal
    • Usha's Book Picks
  • Events
    • News
    • Calendar
  • Contact

Sara Henning Reads from New Book

June 02, 2022 by Nynke Passi
 

Sara Henning will be with us again during our Fall ‘22 residency. She will read from her new book of poetry, Terra Incognita.

These masterful elegies follow the contours of a troubled mother-daughter relationship, explore the paradoxes of mourning, and relish the complicated joys of perseverance to map not only how one makes sense of the world but also how one reenters it after experiencing a transformative loss.

Divided into four sections, this poignant collection begins with “Terra Inferna,” which chronicles a single mother’s attempt to raise her daughter in 1980s rural Georgia. “Terra Incognita” follows the daughter’s journey across states, out of devastating poverty, and into a loving marriage, as her mother loses her battle with colon cancer. In “Terra Nova,” the speaker meditates on her mother’s passing, her crisis of meaning turning to revelation of legacy’s love. “Terra Firma” brings closure, as the speaker reconciles her grief while rediscovering how to find joy in life’s small moments.

“Sara Henning’s Terra Incognita opens with a dream, and the poems undo us the way dreams do, with imagery that is seared into our minds so completely we can’t shake it. I left this book reluctantly, a little dazed, and wanting to go back inside the world Henning created, ‘the sky dusk-raw,’ the stars ‘moving braille.’ Terra Incognita is a rare book of poems, and Henning is a rare talent”
— Maggie Smith, author of Good Bones and Goldenrod
“In Sara Henning’s stunning elegies, the mundane sears and sparks, infused with the speaker’s fierce grief. These poems accelerate, their energetic lines and images fueled by Henning’s imaginative precision and a lyricism that pops with its verbs and trills, whether telling a story of a mare’s head thrust into the window of a Chevy Nova, or the loss of a baby, or a mother’s Dilaudid-induced hallucinations of violent abduction while dying of cancer. The poems of Terra Incognita are thrilling with their vibrancy and beauty in the face of loss.”
— Rebecca Morgan Frank, author of Oh You Robot Saints!

Sara Henning is the author of View from True North, cowinner of the 2017 Crab Orchard Series in Poetry Open Competition Award and the 2019 High Plains Book Award. Her honors include the Lynda Hull Memorial Poetry Prize, the George Bogin Memorial Award, the Allen Ginsberg Poetry Award, and awards from the Sewanee Writers' Conference and the Vermont Studio Center. Her work has been published in journals such as Quarterly West, Crab Orchard Review, Witness, Crazyhorse, Meridian, and the Cincinnati Review. She lives and writes in Nacogdoches, Texas, where she serves as coordinator of the BFA program in creative writing at Stephen F. Austin State University and poetry editor for Stephen F. Austin State University Press.

You can purchase the book
here.
You can find out more
here.

“In Terra Incognita, Sara Henning gives us a passionate group of elegies for her mother and an equally intense set of odes to her marriage. The territory she explores may be unknown ground, as her title suggests, but the poet knows where she stands. At every turn these poems are totally imaginative, totally alive.”
— Mark Jarman, author of The Heronry: Poems and Dailiness: Essays on Poetry
“Grief turns out to be a place none of us knows until we reach it,’ Joan Didion once declared. Sara Henning crafts beautiful and protean music out of the terra incognita of motherlessness. The gallery of richly evoked lines and incidents suggests the poet is a dynamic, at-the-ready elegist for all she sees. ‘In the belly of every summer day is a god / taking its first breath, so I learn to call it praying, / my mother forsaking the AC for a grace called smoking / in the car.’ Yes, one of the book’s major triumphs is that Henning, with artful precision and a daughter’s utmost love, makes the vital woman who was her first window on the world count for the reader as well.”
— Cyrus Cassells, 2021 poet laureate of Texas
June 02, 2022 /Nynke Passi
  • Newer
  • Older
 

Newsletter

Sign up with your first name, last name, and email address to receive news and updates.

WE RESPECT YOUR PRIVACY.

Thank you for signing up to receive news and updates from Soul Bone. We hope you will enjoy our upcoming events and workshops.

All content © by Soul Bone℠, a Limited Liability Company.
All rights reserved. NO AI TRAINING.
Soul Bone℠ is a service mark. All rights reserved.
Art Illustrations: Jitske Wadman or public domain vintage imagery.
Webdesign by Nynke Passi & conpoet.

HOME