Description:Sharply observed and metaphorically inventive, Ocean Effects is a worthy follow-up to Galvin's National Book Award finalist Habitat. It includes a new vein of Galvin's trademark richly observed lyric poems on the biota, landscapes, and weathers of coastal New England. Seascapes and the natural world bracket sequences spoken by personae as various as the seventeenth-century American colonist Roger Williams, small-town cops, a squatter in the ruins of Chernobyl, a nineteenth-century Russian general in Mongolia, and a Cape Cod carpenter. Galvin's monologues, tensile and energetic free verse, are touched with the speech of the historical periods in which they take place.the surface was too hugely roiled for a muskrat's dive or a shag's, it was almost the "footprint" a whale leaves when it sounds for the depths, but that wasn'twhat came up blowing water like a kid after a dive, its brown-golden head too big for a weasel's, and rose up to its shoulders seeing me there, its tail working behind--a river otter, a five-footer, no goofy stuffed toy, but almost smiling, the way a salamander turned up under a log seems to smile as if to say, You have found me out.>From "Splash" published in Ocean Effects by Brendan Galvin. Copyright © 2007 by Brendan Galvin. All rights reserved.PRAISE FOR THE BOOK"Galvin is an essential presence in contemporary American poetry."--Tar River Poetry80 pages, 5.5 x 9This publication is supported in part by a grant for the National Endowment for the Arts.