Description
Poetry. "As if responding to Rumi's exhortation, 'Don't go back to sleep,' Janet MacFadyen writes, 'It's impossible to sleep with so much openness,' and these poems bristle with synaptic leaps, sonically, imagistically, metaphorically, and with a compassion for sentience—human and non-human. They weep, and water with grace. If your soul is feeling dry, these poems will quench and restore, even in their sidling up next to darkness. Quiet and powerful, a curated record of mind with aesthetic exactitude. Exquisite."—Laura McCullough
Author Bio
Janet MacFadyen is the author of A Newfoundland Journal (Killick Press) and two chapbooks: In the Provincelands (Slate Roof Press) and In Defense of Stones (Heatherstone Press). Her work has been nominated for the Forward and Pushcart prizes, and has appeared in numerous journals, including The Atlanta Review, Crann�g, The Malahat Review, Osiris, Poetry, and Terrain. In addition to a fellowship at the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center, she has had residencies at Cill Rialaig (Ireland) and the Fowler and C-Scape dune shacks in Provincetown. She works as a freelance editor and teaches community poetry workshops. She lives in the tangled woods of western Massachusetts.
Author City: AMHERST, MA USA