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Rescue Dogs
Rescue Dogs - Image 2

Rescue Dogs

Rated 5.00 out of 5 based on 1 customer rating
(1 customer review)

by Fred Zirm

Release: July 15, 2024
Purchase Here
SKU: 978-1-956285-65-9 Category: Poetry Collections Tags: dogs, Fred Zirm, Rescue Dogs

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  • Description
  • Additional information
  • Sample Poem
  • Reviews (1)

Description

Rescue Dogs

by Fred Zirm

Finalist in The Poetry Box Chapbook Prize 2023

Fred Zirm has known and adopted many Rescue Dogs throughout his life. These canine companions taught him both serious and humorous lessons about life, love, friendship, aging, death, and resilience. Between the laughter and the tears, these delightful and heartwarming poems featuring Carabelle, Dory, Larry, Woofer, Trey, and Snuffles, will have you ponder: Who rescued whom?

Enjoy a Video of Fred reading from the book:

 

Early Praise for Rescue Dogs:

I scratch her head and then
offer her the tethered freedom of the leash.
She is once again delighted
the world is just beyond our door—
and she can lead me through it.

And the world we enter with Fred Zirm’s dog is a lovely place indeed, full of beauty, wry humor, and unexpected discoveries, a place where dogs rescue humans, humans rescue dogs, and the reader goes away with a deeper appreciation of the ancient and mysterious bond between animal and man. This lovely book made me realize that I absolutely have to get a dog, because you can’t really take a walk without having a dog there to show you what you’re missing. As Zirm points out:

all dogs are guide dogs,
alerting us to what we
might miss, all the unseen
mysteries of place and time
in a twig or leaf or clump
of grass that tell us where
we are and who’s been here before.

Take a walk with Fred Zirm and his dogs. You’ll be reminded of why you came to poetry in the first place.

—George Bilgere, author of Cheap Motel Rooms of My Youth (Rattle Chapbook Prizewinner)

Hark (and bark) to the heroes that pounce and doze throughout Fred Zirm’s moving new collection, Rescue Dogs: here’s Dory the Deaf, Trey the Tri-pawed, Carabelle, Larry, Snuff, Woof, and the younger one. All dogs are guide dogs, Zirm writes, and these fetching meditations show the deep affection and abiding insights that come from living tenderly with animals as an animal. Wry and warm, Zirm’s poems remain eager to see what comes next while illuminating the hard lessons and gentle paradoxes of life among loss and time.

—Zach Savich, author of Daybed

In Rescue Dogs, Fred Zirm takes us on our mortal journey with dogs as both our guides and our companions. Observing the human world through their eyes—and their world through our own—his poems become the leash we follow to a deeper understanding of what it means to be alive. With its wit, intelligence, and profound emotion, Rescue Dogs deserves a place on every dog owner’s—and poetry lover’s—bedside table.

—Sue Ellen Thompson, author of Sea Nettles: New & Selected Poems
and Winner of the Maryland Author Award

 

About the Author

After earning a B.A. and M.A. in English from Michigan State and an M.F.A. from the Playwrights Workshop at the University of Iowa, Fred Zirm spent nearly 40 years teaching English and drama at an independent boys’ school in Maryland. Since his retirement, he has continued to direct plays at community theaters but has also focused on writing poetry and has become deeply involved with the Writers’ Center at the Chautauqua Institution. His work has been published in over a dozen small literary magazines and anthologies, including The Café Review, Still Crazy, cahoodadoodaling (Pushcart Prize nominee), Greek Fire, Poeming Pigeons, and Objects in the Rearview Mirror. His first poetry chapbook, Object Lessons (Main Street Rag), was published in January 2021.

 

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Additional information

Weight 8 oz
Dimensions 6 × 9 × .2 in
ISBN

978-1-956285-65-9

pages

approx 48

Wholesale

via INGRAM (after July 15, 2024)

Sample Poem

Rescue Dogs

“I tell my poetry workshop students, if you’re stuck in a poem,
just have a dog come in.”  —Billy Collins

I picture a climbing party of novice poets
trapped on a narrow, wind-battered ledge.
Tied together at the waist by an overextended
metaphor, they collapse and gasp in the thin air
of abstraction, calling out for help.
At that moment, a Saint Bernard,
large pawed and panting,
scrambles over ice and rock
to offer the climbers what they need—
the chipped and weathered oaken cask
of concrete images hanging from his furry neck.

Or I imagine a lone poet, lost
in deep woods of his own devising
as he tries to follow Dante or Frost,
who have left no breadcrumbs
or broken branches.
Preoccupied, he stumbles
over a hidden meaning
and falls into an arcane abyss.
At that moment, his faithful collie
races barking to the farmhouse
where the mother, holding a dish towel, says,
“She’s trying to tell us something.”
“Yeah,” the father scowls and strokes his chin.
“Timmy’s fallen down that damn well again.”
He spits in the barnyard dust, then wipes
his mouth with the back of his hand.
“I told him to quit messing around with allegory.”

At this moment, my dog Snuff,
a shepherd-hound refugee
from Death Row, looks up at me
with the hurt but hopeful
eyes of the once abandoned.
I rise from my desk. Her tail thumps
the floor as I scratch her head and then
offer her the tethered freedom of the leash.
She is once again delighted
the world is just beyond our door—
and she can lead me through it.
A Parting Gift

When someone comes to the door,
Dory grabs her favorite toy
and runs to greet them
with tail-wagging hospitality.

But if they reach for that mangled
stuffed jellyfish, she darts away
after offering what she had
no intention of ever giving up.

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1 review for Rescue Dogs

  1. Rated 5 out of 5

    Paul Scimonelli – July 12, 2024

    Once again, Fred Zirm has crafted a set of clever, heartfelt, and poignant poems punctuated with his classic wry wit. These paeans to pups filled me with warmth, joy, and longing for our beloved deceased Dane. They are enough to even make a cat lover cry! These short, touching tributes to man’s best friend makes you want to scratch behind the ears of your closest companion. In “Bait and Switch” the concept if a “Buddhist bully” is so classic Fred.
    It is such an enjoyable read and re-read, perfect with your early morning. Coffee and his first bowl if kibble. I am honored to recommend this book to everyone. To Fred, Bravo Tutti!

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