$50 Gets Your Package Globally – For Free
Best Illustrated Games of Patience - Classic Card Games for Adults & Seniors | Perfect for Relaxation, Memory Training & Family Game Nights
Best Illustrated Games of Patience - Classic Card Games for Adults & Seniors | Perfect for Relaxation, Memory Training & Family Game Nights
Best Illustrated Games of Patience - Classic Card Games for Adults & Seniors | Perfect for Relaxation, Memory Training & Family Game Nights

Best Illustrated Games of Patience - Classic Card Games for Adults & Seniors | Perfect for Relaxation, Memory Training & Family Game Nights

$12.18 $22.16 -45% OFF

Free shipping on all orders over $50

7-15 days international

16 people viewing this product right now!

30-day free returns

Secure checkout

71107692

Guranteed safe checkout
amex
paypal
discover
mastercard
visa
apple pay

Description

“This beautiful work of late Romanticism finds Estes often roaming, sometimes making his bed in uncomfortable places ... The poems speak in riddles, impossible questions, vivid sensuous description, and, on one page, doggerel.” ―Aaron KuninWhat exactly is an illustrated game of patience? Imagine something like group solitaire within a room full of objects, Duchamp on a TV, some great old albums, voices from a radio or the past and a set of reverberating cymbals. In Ben Estes's Illustrated Games of Patience, the game involves sorting through objects and landscapes to reveal their “soft hums of isolation,” often in the wake of love. If there is winning involved, the rewards are hope for renewal and a “faith in arranging.” Filled with color and light, these poems make vivid the tender details of close observation, “urging love to stretch and green.”Ben Estes lives in Kingston, New York. He worked as the editor of A Dark Dreambox of Another Kind: The Poems of Alfred Starr Hamilton (with Alan Felsenthal); Together & Alone, the photographs of Karlheinz Weinberger; and the poetry anthology On The Mesa: An Anthology of Bolinas Writing (The Song Cave, 2021). He has most recently shown his paintings at Situations Gallery and Paula Cooper Gallery, both in New York.

Reviews

******
- Verified Buyer
One day, a man was named Ben Estes. He met John Ashbery, and he sanded down the ends of his sentences. Estes liked the feeling of sentence endings, and he liked the feeling of the eternal sentence momentum. So he created two different mechanisms. The line ending and the enjambment. The sentence feels like it could maybe end at the line break. And then the enjambment makes you wonder why you would have even thought that. And then how this all rests on this incredibly confident sentence going forthness. Ben Estes may be the kind monarch of the sentence going-forthness, so much so that a sentence need not just go forth from the beginning. It can actually go forth from any moment in itself. “Go forth” might be the opening to a poem, and later in the poem is this subtle, but still discernible “going forthedness” that you can feel, and maybe it’s even like “going / forthedness” but likely not. Because there is just enough guidance for all these points.