Poetry. "These wonderful poems by Ruth Lepson are deeply felt meditations on family, friends, lovers, the people she 'can't leave behind.' The book begins with poems about places, mainly Swampscott, Massachusetts, a town on the ocean that she loves to visit. 'Time Line' then makes something like a drawing out of the past, and 'Function Theory' suggests a sort of mathematical model of a girl's thought processes. These are followed by several delicate poems about Ruth's aging parents and others about deceased friends. This private world is then enlarged, often with humor, to include strangers both overheard and seen, as well as works of art. These are the 'things I can name' out of which she makes her life"--Joel Sloman.
Author City: WATERTOWN, MA USA
Ruth Lepson is poet-in-residence at the New England Conservatory of Music. Her books of poetry are MORPHOLOGY, a collaboration with artist Rusty Crump, of photographs and prose poems (blazeVOX, 2007) and Dreaming in Color (Alice James Books). She edited Poetry from Sojourner: A Feminist Anthology (Univ. of Illinois Press). Her writing has appeared in Carve, Jacket, EAOGH, Shampoo, Agni, Harvard Review and other magazines, and she has read at the Bowery Poetry Club and La Mama Galleria in New York, on NPR's "All Things Considered" and at many other places. In recent years she has been collaborating with musicians, and her jazz and poetry group, low road, performs and has a CD forthcoming. She organized poetry readings for Oxfam America.