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Religion / Spirituality > The Wonder Paradox

The Wonder Paradox: Awe, Poetry, and the Meaningful Life

By Jennifer Michael Hecht


Where to buy


Publish Date

March 05, 2024

Category

Body, Mind & Spirit
Religion / Meditations

Price

$27.25

The Wonder Paradox offers a lively, practical, and transcendent road map to meaning and connection through poetry.

Where do we find magic? Peace? Connection?

We have calendars to mark time, communal spaces to bring us together, bells to signal hours of contemplation, official archives to record legacies, the wisdom of sages read aloud, weekly, to map out the right way to live—in kindness, justice, morality. These rhythms and structures of society were all once set by religion. Now, for many, religion no longer runs the show.

So how then to celebrate milestones? Find rules to guide us? Figure out which texts can focus our attention but still offer space for inquiry, communion, and the chance to dwell for a dazzling instant in what can’t be said? Where, really, are truth and beauty? The answer, says The Wonder Paradox, is in poetry.

In twenty chapters built from years of questions and conversations with those looking for an authentic and meaningful life, Jennifer Michael Hecht offers ways to mine and adapt the useful aspects of tradition and to replace what no longer feels true. Through cultures and poetic wisdom from around the world—Sappho, Rumi, Shakespeare, Issa, Tagore, Frost, Szymborska, Angelou, and others—she blends literary criticism with spiritual guidance rooted in the everyday. Linking our needs to particular poems, she helps us better understand those needs, our very being, and poetry itself.

Our capacity for wonder is one of the greatest joys of being human; The Wonder Paradox celebrates that instinct and that yearning.

Jennifer Michael Hecht, a historian and poet, is the award-winning and bestselling author of the histories Doubt, Stay, The Happiness Myth, and The End of the Soul. Her poetry books include Who Said, The Next Ancient World, and Funny. She earned her PhD in history from Columbia University and teaches in New York City.

ISBN: 9781250321855
Format: Paperback
Pages: 368
Publisher: Picador
Published: March 05, 2024

“Outstanding . . . Hecht offers her hard-won musings on the sacredness of daily life, the miracle of slowing down and noticing, and the nourishment of communal experience.”

—Elizabeth Gonzalez James, The Rumpus

“Sui generis . . . [A book of] insightful sweeping grandeur.”

—George Yatchisin, California Review of Books

“Hecht offers ways to excavate the useful aspects of tradition and to replace what no longer feels true . . . She helps us better understand [our] needs, ourselves, and poetry.”