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A Visionary Poem by the Celebrated Aboriginal Australian Writer Ali Cobby Eckermann Ali Cobby Eckermann’s sparse, visionary poem follows the contours of an Australian landscape and dreamscape, accompanied by magpie and owl, sun and moon, as well as...
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DAYS presents the pencil drawings of Brian Calvin, selected from sketchbooks in which he made one a day over the course of a year. Presented chronologically, they include glimpses of family life, cubist portraits, drafts for sculptures, abstract com...
An inventive new collection from the acclaimed African-American poet Jay Wright. In POSTAGE STAMPS, Jay Wright continues his lifelong exploration as a sojourner, a pilgrim, the “homo viator,” who speaks through and by an embellishment of a constantl...
The uncanny ninth collection from Graham Foust “Reading TERMINATIONS is like watching a make-up tutorial in reverse—which is to say, the deconstruction of an art that, on its face, is applied to conceal and therefore beautify what is inherently col...
“Elizabeth Arnold’s poems are structures for our times: built to move and to hold. Within them surge the elemental forces, the earth’s deep patterns and the human-driven, breakneck hurts—and the poet’s own migratory mind, coming honestly to terms wi...
Over the last two decades, John Tipton has directed his energy at once toward innovative translations of Greek tragedies and his own gnomic poetry about the uses of myth and syntax. The twain meet in BELIEVERS AND SEVEN SERMONS FROM THE BACCHAE, an ...
In Andrew E. Colarusso’s Hívado, we catch vivid glimpses of a life spent between Puerto Rico and New York: a moment undressing beside a tarn in the rural barrio of Limaní, the loneliness of buses and taxis, dead bees in the corner of an apartment in...
"There's a lot of fake anger out there, masking dangerous fear. Daisy Fried gives us the real thing: anger born of despair, love, desire, injustice, and loss. She's a grave robber, revivifying the corpse of Baudelaire to mess with him and help her t...
Poetry. In THIRTEEN QUINTETS FOR LOIS, Jay Wright has found both form and structure to intertwine aspects of music, logic, number theory, and philosophy in a wide-ranging, exhilarating harmony. With rhymes providing a ceremonial dimension, the poems...
Literary Nonfiction. Essays. A blend of literary criticism and memoir, Jennifer Moxley's FOR THE GOOD OF ALL, DO NOT DESTROY THE BIRDS recounts a life spent in the company of birds and poems, intimately attuned to the mysteries of singing. These ess...
Poetry. For more than two decades Graham Foust has been sounding out the limits of common expression through precise lyricism, a tragicomic, almost slapstick absurdism, and syncopated guesses about what things might mean. EMBARRASSMENTS offers a syn...
Literary Nonfiction. Art. Photography. Across the plains, in towns too small and scattered to field a full squad, high schools play six-man football. This book follows a single season of one such team, Prairie School, located in the vast Pawnee Nati...
Poetry. Afican & African American Studies. Edited and with an introduction by Eugene B. Redmond. "His work remains—a testimonial to his own committed love, his own sharp perceptiveness and zeal."—Gwendolyn Brooks"In 1968, a young Black man, Henry Du...
Poetry. Edited and introduced by Devin Johnston, REACHING LIGHT selects from five decades of work by one of Australia's finest poets. "Readers of Robert Adamson's books will have understood that this distinguished man of letters and major poet is on...
Poetry. The title poem in William Fuller's DAYBREAK begins with something abstract. "At daybreak one saw receptacles from the day before and in those receptacles lay strings of associations." From such associations "eyes emanating soft red light" em...