Description

Book Synopsis
A book-length poem in six sections, Long Rules takes readers to five Trappist monasteries in the southeastern United States to consider the intersections of solitude, family, music, and landscape. Its lines unspool in a loose and echoing blank verse that investigates monastic rules, sunlight, Saint Basil, turnips, Thomas Merton, saddle-backed caterpillars, John Prine, fatherhood, and everything in between. Looking inside and outside the self, Perry asks, what, or whom, are we serving? Winner of the Backwaters Prize in Poetry, this essay in verse contemplates the meaning of solitude and its contemporary ramifications in a time of uncertainty.

Trade Review
“A remarkable addition to the company of book-length, broadly inclusive poems like James McMichael’s Four Good Things and C. S. Giscombe’s Giscome Road. . . . In blank verse that is flexible and assured, the poet’s attention runs the gamut from Saint Basil to Willie Nelson, from dulcimer acoustics to the caterpillars that eat his blueberry plants. The voice here is neighborly, its pacing exquisite. Perry’s rich meditation on nature, community, and the different forms of love brims with music and insight.”—Don Bogen, author of Immediate Song
“With one of the greatest opening lines for a book ever, ‘Listen, child of God, to Willie Nelson,’ Long Rules is a joy to read. It calls itself an essay in verse, following a steady form so effortlessly you half forget it’s not just an essay. And the skill in putting these poems together is amazing to experience as a reader. The poet teaches about theology and contemplation through musings on songwriters and musicians, making centuries-old thoughts seem at home with us today.”—Matt Mason, state poet of Nebraska
“Nathaniel Perry’s Long Rules is a gentle doctrinal essay exploring the mystery by which collectivity authors solitude and prayer invents the world. . . . Long Rules is so profound and beautiful that, but for the casual asides to the reader and references to contemporary singers, I would half think it was the lost work of some wise soul from the deep past.”—Jennifer Moxley, author of Druthers and The Open Secret

Table of Contents
I. Our Lady of the Angels: Crozet, Virginia
II. Holy Cross Abbey: Berryville, Virginia
III. Mepkin Abbey: Moncks Corner, South Carolina
IV. Our Lady of Gethsemani: New Haven, Kentucky
V. Cumberland County, Virginia
VI. Monastery of the Holy Spirit: Conyers, Georgia
Acknowledgments

Long Rules

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Thu 25 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Nathaniel Perry

    7 in stock

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      Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
      Publication Date: 01/11/2021
      ISBN13: 9781496227980, 978-1496227980
      ISBN10: 1496227980

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A book-length poem in six sections, Long Rules takes readers to five Trappist monasteries in the southeastern United States to consider the intersections of solitude, family, music, and landscape. Its lines unspool in a loose and echoing blank verse that investigates monastic rules, sunlight, Saint Basil, turnips, Thomas Merton, saddle-backed caterpillars, John Prine, fatherhood, and everything in between. Looking inside and outside the self, Perry asks, what, or whom, are we serving? Winner of the Backwaters Prize in Poetry, this essay in verse contemplates the meaning of solitude and its contemporary ramifications in a time of uncertainty.

      Trade Review
      “A remarkable addition to the company of book-length, broadly inclusive poems like James McMichael’s Four Good Things and C. S. Giscombe’s Giscome Road. . . . In blank verse that is flexible and assured, the poet’s attention runs the gamut from Saint Basil to Willie Nelson, from dulcimer acoustics to the caterpillars that eat his blueberry plants. The voice here is neighborly, its pacing exquisite. Perry’s rich meditation on nature, community, and the different forms of love brims with music and insight.”—Don Bogen, author of Immediate Song
      “With one of the greatest opening lines for a book ever, ‘Listen, child of God, to Willie Nelson,’ Long Rules is a joy to read. It calls itself an essay in verse, following a steady form so effortlessly you half forget it’s not just an essay. And the skill in putting these poems together is amazing to experience as a reader. The poet teaches about theology and contemplation through musings on songwriters and musicians, making centuries-old thoughts seem at home with us today.”—Matt Mason, state poet of Nebraska
      “Nathaniel Perry’s Long Rules is a gentle doctrinal essay exploring the mystery by which collectivity authors solitude and prayer invents the world. . . . Long Rules is so profound and beautiful that, but for the casual asides to the reader and references to contemporary singers, I would half think it was the lost work of some wise soul from the deep past.”—Jennifer Moxley, author of Druthers and The Open Secret

      Table of Contents
      I. Our Lady of the Angels: Crozet, Virginia
      II. Holy Cross Abbey: Berryville, Virginia
      III. Mepkin Abbey: Moncks Corner, South Carolina
      IV. Our Lady of Gethsemani: New Haven, Kentucky
      V. Cumberland County, Virginia
      VI. Monastery of the Holy Spirit: Conyers, Georgia
      Acknowledgments

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