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In his new collection, poet Tim Hunt looks for Where, and what, remains of our national myth of the West. The “West” at the heart of Tim Hunt’s new poetry collection is of course a real place in terms of its geography and history, but more importan...
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In her debut collection, poet Susan Cobin conjures cock-eyed mirror worlds that reflect what our own might better be Some poets describe the world; others imagine worlds of words into being, cock-eyed mirrors that often reveal more than mere “reali...
In the bravest, saddest poetry you are likely to read, Vincent Bell writes first-hand on the brink of the nothingness of dementia. Poetry can be an especially cerebral form of expression, an act of playing mind games with language. Only here the ga...
A blazing new arrival on the poetry scene, Danae Younge writes from the blurred intersection of race, gender, and sexuality. With this book we hail the arrival of an electrifying new voice on the poetry scene. Though to be clear, Danae Younge has a...
In his dazzling new collection poet Michael Brosnan literally and figuratively deconstructs the "sublime" in every way imaginable. "This world of us — it seems only capable of revealing hints of care in slant rhymes and odd enjambments. And I’m won...
Artist/poet Kurt Cole Eidsvig critiques the "emptiness / and excess, " and violence, at the heart of contemporary life. The operative word in the title of Kurt Cole Eidsvig’s new poetry collection is art, appropriately enough since he is a visual a...
Ceridwen Hall's debut full-length collection brings "charming geekiness" to poems of family and communication . “Acoustic shadows are areas where the typical movement of soundwaves is disrupted—by wind, by walls, by tidal currents or fluctuations i...
Polymath poet H. L. Hix responds to Plato and Marie de France with wry modern takes. Plato may have pestered poets out of his republic, but he peppered his dialogues plenty with poetry of his own: the mind as an aviary, the soul as contrary horses ...
Poet William Greenfield portrays the gritty realties of working class family life in a new collection informed by his work in child welfare. Rarely has the abased adage to “write what you know” produced such profound results as these poems from Wil...
Poet Ray Keifetz imagines a vivid world into being in his second collection. This new poetry collection begins with images of violence and loss, of “blood prints / on the wall.” It tells of a world where “All that can be lost / has been lost.” That...
Poet Jean Nordhaus distills a lifetime of experience in her ninth collection. The title of Jean Nordhaus’s new collection suggests something light and lyrical – until you read the title poem and find yourself among the corpses in a concentration ca...
An achingly beautiful verse memoir of a painful transatlantic coming-of-age. The title of Tony Howarth’s verse memoir derives from a passage in the Odyssey to the effect that we humans inflict greater pain on one another than any divine wrath. The ...
Prose poems recount a biracial author's discovery of his hidden family. In the opening page of this compelling memoir related in (mostly) prose poems, Jerry Wemple announces that “everything is connected, even those who are reading this here and no...
Poet Charlene Fix examines her heritage, identity, and perspective as a "Jewgirl". Of the provocative title of her new poetry collection, Charlene Fix declares “if it has a sting, she appropriates the whole shebang.” Despite describing herself as a...
Gary Stephen's poems after Su Dongpo make one of China's greatest classical poets accessible to an English-language audience. It seems at first an astonishing thing that poetry written nearly a millennium ago, in another language from a distant cu...