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October 5, 2011

Review by Trina L. DrotarParis Poems

THE PARIS POEMS
by Suzanne Burns

BlazeVOX
303 Bedford Avenue
Buffalo, NY 14216 USA
ISBN 9781609640460
2010, 84 pp., $16.00
www.blazevox.org

Suzanne Burns’ The Paris Poems is a tour of Paris via popular culture. Jim Morrison reappears throughout the collection while Louis Vuitton and Quasimodo figure prominently in others. Burns addresses Coco Chanel, and in “Walking with Victor Hugo,” compares her love for this man to the Americans’ belief that they love Mary Shelley. This collection, however, is not about popular culture or necessarily about Paris, but these poems could not have been written without incorporating both because they are the vehicles Burns uses to comment on how we travel at times, how we love at others, and how we view the world. This collection is thoroughly enjoyable at every turn, and I have had the pleasure of rereading several poems. Burns blends history with contemporary society and tells stories that ask us to think.

I have a fascination with Paris, and I picked this book up because of the title and because of the cover, which is primarily shades along the gray scale with a simple pink stripe near the bottom quarter of the cover where the title and author’s name appear. The focus of the cover for me is the elongated shadow of the person walking across the stone street. It is not clear to me whether the walker is male or female, and it doesn’t matter to me. It intrigued me enough to open the book, and I was certainly not disappointed. The cover, especially the shadow figure, acted as a guide at times.

The collection begins, appropriately, with “Arrival,” which advises travelers to “always arrive in Paris / on a Sunday afternoon / the skeleton of this fastened city / will become your bones.” Images and lines like these are what bring the greatest joy as I move through the book. She moves here from light lines that seem cheery and like something a guide might suggest to the third and fourth lines which become heavier, primarily through her use of sound and rhythm. By arriving on a Sunday, the traveler can perhaps view the city without the paintings, the souvenirs, and without the window dressing. “It’s just you and these abandoned streets,” writes Burns.

Her word choice is always interesting. The streets in this poem are “abandoned,” and she writes to arrive “with an empty heart.” I want to know why the streets have been abandoned, and I’ve always heard that Paris is for lovers, is the city of love, so it seems odd that I should be asked to arrive empty-hearted, yet the narrator later says that “you will feel alone among millions / fall in love with things / you never allowed yourself to see.” These lines are wonderful, yet I am left with a sense of foreboding, that perhaps reveals itself in the next poem, “Paris Can Never Be Our Poem,” where Burns writes that “it’s an ailment to mythologize / this European host.” She places Paris not in France, the country, but in Europe, the continent. I find this fascinating.

One of my favorite poems is “Louis Vuitton,” and some of my favorite lines are “the Americans [long] to get lost in Paris” and “the Parisians [long] to ignore the Eiffel Tower” and “the Eiffel Tower [longs] to climb to the top of itself and see what all the fuss is about.” Here, Burns seems to say that too often we fail to see the beauty in our own city. When was the last time, she might be asking, we ventured into our own town to see its sights? After reading this poem, I am more inclined to visit the sights within my city that visitors always want to see so that I can discover what makes them special.

In this same poem, Burns shows how the monogrammed souvenirs are not without politics. She writes that “the Champs-Έlysées / can barely contain your name / while China hears the silent sound / of children trained not to scream / when they sew thread into finger bones / making knock-offs of you.” She addresses the American’s need for designer products and the cost, not in dollars, in human suffering.
Throughout this collection, the poems ask us to look, to see, and intimate that we often do not look beyond the surface. Although often complicated by the inclusion of more than one voice or topic, the poems were easy to follow because Burns used her lines as guides, and those lines often made me stop and look a little closer at what was being said.

Near the end of the collection, “Pilgrimage,” a poem dedicated to Jim Morrison, shows the narrator as an American and shows how s/he views different groups of people visiting Morrison’s grave:

There is an eternal wake around Jim’s grave
everyone got the invite
               the assumed R.S.V.P.
the Italians are taking pictures and drinking wine
the Spaniards are smoking pot and crying
the dark man dressed like he stepped
from an avant-garde film
               springs his switchblade
               to slash the heart line of his palm
bleeding himself onto Jim’s final home.
the American are doing what we always do
               littering
               looking at watches
               lamenting the currency exchange
we always commemorate the one who got away.

The collection ends with “Faith,” and leaves us questioning where we place our faith when Burns writes “and how we store the idea of resurrection / in such a dark, brooking place / that seeking our fortune in a gypsy’s ring / might be enough salvation.” We look outside of ourselves, seeking something to believe in–Jim Morrison, a gypsy’s ring, monogrammed goods, Paris.

Suzanne Burns takes us through Paris, stopping by some of the most famous locations, and asks us to question our motives at each step. Her word choice is strong, which creates images that will remain long after finishing the book. Each poem is a story unto itself, and the collection is the poetic equivalent of a novel that should be read multiple times and shared.

____________

Trina L. Drotar obtained her MA in English-Creative Writing from CSUS where she studied with Doug Rice, Joshua McKinney, Mary Mackey, and Peter Grandbois. She has worked as editor of Calaveras Station and currently works as editor of Poetry Now. Her reviews and poetry have appeared or are forthcoming in Rattle, Word Riot, Pirene’s Fountain, Ophidian I and II, and Medusa’s Kitchen. She is originally from San Francisco, CA and can be reached at trinaldrotar@gmail.com.

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October 10, 2009

Review by Andrew McFadyen-KetchumCloisters by Brock

CLOISTERS
by Kristin Bock

Tupelo Press
The Eclipse Mill, Loft 305
PO Box 1767
North Adams, MA 01247
ISBN 978-1-932195-55-2
2008, 69 pp., $16.95
www.tupelopress.org

Kristin Bock’s debut collection of poetry, Cloisters, winner of the Tupelo Press First Book Award for 2008, is a book that keeps its secrets. Eschewing what we typically think of as narrative, Bock’s poems enable a symbolic approach to story-telling, her eye focused more on the interpretive crossroads between the mythical and real realms than on the events that take place within them. In poems like “Phrenology,” in which we find ourselves fingering gravestones to speak to those interred, “Hibernaculum” (a protective case or covering of an animal or plant bud, if you’re unfamiliar with the term), which opens “Stone remembers / the sea / that hollows it,” and “While You Are Away” in which a mannequin comes alive, Cloisters drops us with immense vocal authority into unknown and, yet, oddly familiar territory. The result is a book that keeps its mysteries while examining them; a revealing collection that reveals very little.

Perhaps the most intriguing piece in Cloisters is the first poem, “On Reflection,” which much like the reflection of a tree in water, is a mirror image of itself, the first nine lines of the poem reappearing as the last nine lines in inverse order. Here are the middle six lines:

staggering through the pitiful corn.
I can’t always see through it.
The mind is a pond layered with lilies.
The mind is a pond layered with lilies.
I can’t always see through it
staggering through the pitiful corn.

“On Reflection” could most certainly be seen as a gimmick, a poem that pulls off an inventive and no doubt difficult form but without much of a rationale behind it; form for the sake of form but not much else. But “On Reflection” operates first on the most essential elements of good poetry. The poem’s language is beautiful: “Far from the din of the articulated world, / I wanted to be content in an empty room.” Its similes and metaphors are startling: “a barn on the hillside like a bone, / a limbo of afternoons strung together like cardboard boxes.” And its imagery is masterful: “to be free of your image— / crown of bees, pail of black water / staggering through the pitiful corn.” The result is a poem full of such fresh, unexpected lines that, when the repetition occurs, you don’t at first take notice; there’s a tingling of familiarity but an unassailable need to read on.

Bock truly gets to work in “On Reflection” after you’ve seen the full, visual effect of the inversion, slyly altering punctuation in the second half of the poem to alter syntax and, thus, meaning. Line three and four, for example, “a limbo of afternoons strung together like cardboard boxes, / to be free of your image—”, utilizes an emdash to refer to the strange images in line five, “crown of bees, pail of black water.” When these lines are inverted in lines thirteen through fifteen, however, Bock ends the previous line, “a limbo of afternoons strung together like cardboard boxes,” with a period and capitalizes the nouns in what was previously line five’s “crown of bees, pail of black water”:

Crown of Bees, Pail of Black Water,
to be free of your image—
a limbo of afternoons strung together like cardboard boxes.

These variations modify the fifth line from a statement of image to an address; with a simple twist of syntax we find ourselves in a realm where one can speak to what was previously an inanimate object. This, of course, reworks the way we perceive and interpret the reflected images, word choices, and symbols that, at first glance, are exactly the same as their originals.

Bock uses inversion and syntax in a similar way in the first two lines: “Far from the din of the articulated world, / I wanted to be content in an empty room.” These lines tell us, first, that the speaker is a great distance from “the articulated world” and, second, that the speaker desires to be content with its absence. But when they reappear at the end of the poem, “I wanted to be content in an empty room / far from the din of the articulated world,” the final line now denotes the location of the room rather than that of the speaker. Now we have a speaker who not only has been transported by the work of the poem but who seems to exist in two places at once. Either way, she still desires a contentedness she cannot have; the speaker’s physical location may have changed but his internal discontent remains the same.

By creating such deep meaning without a single shred of narrative, “On Reflection” immediately positions Bock somewhere between narrative and lyric. Bock isn’t a story-teller, but she’s not just singing either, gathering one exquisitely composed line after the other and organizing them in a way that mimics narrative but never allows this narrative to reveal itself. The poems that follow follow suit.

Cloisters’ second poem, “Windscape,” is a series of bold, musical statements: “A great pain strafed the city. // The air was a tapestry weft with cries. // Everywhere, women bandaged / the pietas of soldiers.”

“Because You Refuse to Speak” is startlingly surreal with lines like “Out on the pond,
a snake / inside a swan glides past” and “A hammer sounds / between two mountains.”

“Scarecrow” takes on the voice of its title, declaring “Go back to your life beyond the cornfield, / Back to the farmer’s wife and her faraway heart… // You’ll make no friends here.”

Cloisters’ final piece, “Resurrecting the Thirteen Stations of the Cross,” a prose poem, is visually stunning:

I looked down on a mountain, on a cry rising up from the cracked
earth. I looked down on the swine and the cattle, and they moaned a
little. And I looked down on the tiny beings with their tiny tools, and
a few looked back and shuddered…

It’s important to note that Cloisters is a book of short poems. “The Hymn of the Pearl to the Moon,” for example, is a mere twenty-two words:

Cast in your image
                              and into darkness

we are luminous nudes

bathing
               in firelight
                               by cave pools

mistaking our reflections
                                         for gods.

“The Somniloquy of the Sleeping Asp” is twenty-four:

I am the little black
                               curled inside the lamb.

If the center of the sea forgets me,
                           the center of the sea forgets you.”

In fact, only seven of thirty-eight poems are over a page long, which would be the norm if Cloisters weren’t so dimensionally small— its cover measuring in at 6 inches tall by 5.5 inches wide, the standard being 9 inches by 6 inches. That said, even the longer poems are broken into smaller sections or utilize some sort of organizational element that further compartmentalizes these lyrics. “Notes from the Boat Docks,” for example, is in couplets. “Among Sorrows and Stones” proceeds like an interview with a stanza of questions followed by an italicized stanza of answers:

Who remembers the letter
trembling over a flame?

I do. I buried Isolde in her black sail.

Who accompanied the bride with a scar
to a parking lot swept with paper roses?

It was I who gestured to the scissors as she mended.

No doubt this book will be puzzled over for its lack of narrative, not because collections of lyrical poetry are unusual (they’re not) but because Cloisters gives you the feeling that there is a larger story at work here. A quick scan of middle sections’ titles, for example, “Scarecrow,” “Estranger,” “Return,” “Nostrum,” “Under the Ghost Tree,” “Oracle,” “On Not Finding Your Grave,” “Afterworld,” and “Trying to Pray” creates the sensation of a vast and otherworldly landscape. And there are most certainly a number of motifs that appear in poem after poem: life, death & resurrection, modernity versus antiquity, and the animation of the inanimate. But if there’s a thread that winds its way through these lyrics, it’s about as mysterious as Cloisters’ section titles: October, December, February, April, and August…notice the odd omission of June.

Rather than criticize Bock for the elusive quality of her poems, it’s important to recognize that a decision is being made here— Cloisters doesn’t lack narrative or story, Cloisters simply avoids it, the poet clearly more motivated by the metaphoric, symbolic, and interpretative world and her speaker’s more motivated by their opportunity to speak to someone willing to listen than by an opportunity to explain themselves.

Like the poems themselves, Cloisters is a book that creates a sense of largeness despite its small borders. The result is language and Bock’s language is exquisite, wooing us into one lyric after another so swiftly that, even though we may not know where we are, we trust that Ms. Bock most certainly does. The effect is a book of almost God-like proportions; poems that we can observe and perceive but aren’t exactly certain we can fully understand. Though we’re not sure where we’ve been, we’re relieved to know that we can go back whenever we wish to do so. Cloisters takes us into a world that at times seems secular and, at other times, clearly emanates from the spiritual; something akin to the afterlife, prayer. Cloisters is a book that not only explores but mimics the mysteries of human experience. We are the better for it.

____________

Andrew McFadyen-Ketchum grew up in Nashville, Tennessee, received his MFA in Poetry from Southern Illinois University Carbondale, and now conducts medical research for the Zilkha Institute at the University of Southern California. He has recently published poems, interviews, and reviews in The Missouri Review, Sou’wester, The Southern Indiana Review, The Cortland review, The Crab Orchard Review, Blueline, and The River Oak Review. He has attended the Ropewalk Writers Retreat the last two years on scholarship, was recently awarded second place in the Roxana Rivera Memorial Poetry Prize, and is the Founder and Managing Editor of PoemoftheWeek.org, an online forum of Contemporary American poetry, original and previously-published interviews, essays, and reviews.

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February 26, 2001

Archive

 

In 2006 we began publishing electronic reviews instead of including them in our print issues, so that we could publish more of them, in a more timely manner, and with more spatial freedom. Our policy was to never assign review, and to welcome any opinion that seemed honest. We also encouraged a personal narrative style, to reflect the private and subjective experience of actually reading a book. The E-Reviews section closed at the end of 2013, but over the seven years we published the hundreds of reviews you’ll find below. This is the archive.

 

 

E-Reviews by Book Author

Abani, Chris – Sanctificum
Accardi, Millicent – Woman on a Shaky Bridge
Adams, Rachel – What Is Heard
Addonizio, Kim – Ordinary Genius
Addonizio, Kim – Lucifer at the Starlite
Ang, Arlene – Seeing Birds in Church …
Ashton, Sally – Some Odd Afternoon
Azriel, Yakov – Beads for the Messiah’s Bride
Albergotti, Dan – The Boatloads
Ali, Agha Shahid – The Veiled Suite
Aliesan, Jody – True North: Nord Vrai
Allen, Kelli – Otherwise, Soft White Ash
Alurista – Xicano Duende
Ammons, A.R. – Ommateum (With Doxology)
Arthur, James – Charms Against Lightning
Atkinson, Charles – Fossil Honey
Atwood, Margaret – Morning in the Burned House
Ayers, Lana Hechtman – Dance From …
Ayers, Lana Hechtman – A New Red
Balbo, Ned – Something Must Happen
Bang, Mary Jo – Elegy
Barber, Caleb – Beasts & Violins
Bar-Nadav, Hadara – A Glass of Milk …
Barnstone, Willis – Life Watch
Barnstone, Willism, tr. – Restored New Testament
Bartow, Stewart – Questions for the Sphinx
Bass, Ellen – Mules of Love
Basso, Eric – The Catwalk Watch
Basso, Eric – The Catwalk Watch (2)
Baugher, Janée – The Body’s Physics
Beachy-Quick, Dan – This Nest, Swift Passerine
Beasley, Sandra – Theories of Falling
Beasley, Sandra – I Was the Jukebox
Beatman, Lisa – Manufacturing America
Beck, Art – Summer With All …
Beckman, Joshua – Take It
Belz, Aaron – The Bird Hoverer
Bergmann, F.J. – Out of the Black Forest
Berrigan, Ted – Collected Poems
Bertram, Lillian-Yvonne – But a Storm is Blowing from Paradise
Bethanis, Peter – American Future
Bingham, Remica L. – What We Ask of Flesh
Blatner, Barbara – The Still Position
Blauner, Laurie – Wrong
Bliumis-Dunn, Sally – Talking Underwater
Bly, Robert – Talking into the Ear of the Donkey
Bly, Robert – Talking into the Ear of the Donkey (2)
Bogen, Deborah – Landscape with Silos
Boisseau, Michelle – A Sunday in God Years
Boully, Jenny – [one love affair]*
Bredle, Jason – Standing in Line …
Brehm, John – Help Is on the Way
Briante, Susan – Utopia Minus
Brock, Kristin – Cloisters
Brodsky, Louis Daniel – Dine-Rite: Breakfast Poems
Brodsky, Louis Daniel – By Leaps and Bounds
Brooks, Michelle – Make Yourself Small
Browne, Susan – Zephyr
Bryan Sharon – Sharp Stars
Buckley, Christopher – Modern History
Burnside, John – The Hunt in the Forest
Bursk, Christopher – First Inhabitants of …
Byrne, Edward – Seeded Light
Calder, Kim – Who’s to Say What’s Home
Campbell, Monty, Jr – A Large Dent in the Moon
Capps, Ashley – Mistaking the Sea …
Cardenal, Ernesto – The Origin of Species …
Cardenas, Brenda – From the Tongues …
Carrington, Patrick – Rise, Fall …
Carrington, Patrick – Thirst
Carter, Jared – A Dance in the Street
Castillo, Ana – Watercolor Women …
Chorlton, David – From the Age of Miracles
Clarke, John – Good Lonely Day
Clark, Kevin – Self-Portrait with Explicatives
Cleary, Michael – Halfway Decent Sinners
Clifton, Lucille – Voices
Coke, Allison Hedge – Dog Road Woman
Conner, Peter – The Crows Were Laughing …
Cooper & Estabrook – Methinks I See My Father
Corbett, Maryann – Breath Control
Cortez, Sarah – Cold Blue Steel
Coutley, Lisa Fay – In the Carnival of Breathing
Cowles, Kathryn – Eleanor, Eleanor …
Crenshaw, Brad – My Gargantuan Desire
Crooker, Barbara – More
Crooker, Barbara – Radiance
Crow, Pam – Inside This House
Daniels, Jim – Street
Darling, Kristina Marie – Compendium
Darling, Kristina Marie – Melancholia (An Essay)
Davis, Peter – Hitler’s Moustache
Davis, Peter – Poetry! Poetry! Poetry!
Davis, Todd – Some Heaven
Davis, Todd – In the Kingdom of the Ditch
Dentz, Shira – Door of Thin Skins
Deppe, Theodore – Orpheus on the Red Line
Der-Hovanessian, Diana – The Second Question
Dickman, Michael – The Flies
di Giorgio, Mirosa – Diadem
Dimartino, Joanie – Licking the Spoon
Dimitrov, Alex – American Boys
Dockins, Mike – Slouching in the Path …
Dougherty, Sean Thomas – Sasha Sings…
Doyle, James – The Long View Just Keeps Treading Water
Doyle, James – Bending Under the Yellow ..
Dragojlovic, Dragan – Death’s Homeland
Donnelly, Richard – The Melancholy MBA
Dubrow, Jehanne – From the Fever-World
Dungy, Camille – Suck on the Marrow
Dunn, Robert – Je Ne Regrette Rien
Duval, Quinton – Joe’s Rain
Egan, Moira – Bar Napkin Sonnets
Eglin, Laura Cesarco – Tailor Shop: Threads
Espada, Martin – The Republic of Poetry
Espada, Martin – The Trouble Ball
Espaillat, Rhina – Her Place in These Designs
Essinger, Cathryn, Innocence
Estess, Sybil Pitmann – Blue, Candled …
Fagan, Aaron – Garage
Fagan, Aaron – Garage (2)
Fargnoli, Patricia – Then, Something
Feinfeld, D.A – Rodin’s Eyes
Ferro, Jeanpaul – Being Dead
Ferro, Jeanpaul – Jazz
Fetherling, George – Plans Deranged by Time
Fielden, Amelia – Baubles, Bangles & Beads
Fischer, B.K. – Mutiny Gallery
Fisher-Wirth, Ann – Dream Cabinet
Foust, Rebecca – Dark Card
Foust, Rebecca – Mom’s Canoe
Fox, Valerie – The Glass Book
Frith, Carol – Two for a Journey
Fry, John – Silt Will Swirl
Garrison, David Lee – Playing Bach on the D.C. Metro
Spera, Gabriel – The Rigid Body
Garvey, Pamela – Fear
Gavin, Larry – Stone and Sky
Ghaffer, Asher – Wasps in a Golden …
Gillan, Maria Mazziotti – The Place I Call Home
Gillette, Michelle – The Green Cottage
Gloeggler, Tony – Greatest Hits
Gluck, Louise – A Village Life
Girmay, Aracelis – Teeth
Goetsch, Douglas – Your Whole Life
Goldbarth, Albert – Everyday People
Goldner, Harvey – Her Bright Bottom
Golos, Veronica – Vocabulary of Silence
Good, Howie – Cryptic Endearments
Goodan, Kevin – Winter Tenor
Goodman, Brent – My Brother Swimming …
Goodyear, Dana – The Oracle of Hollywood Boulevard
Grant, Alex – Chains & Mirrors
Graziano, Nathan – Teaching Metaphors
Greenhouse, Stuart – What Remains
Greinki/Rimbaud – Drunken Boat
Griffiths, M.A. – Grasshopper
Grimm, Teri Youmans – Dirt Eaters
Guess, Carol – F IN
Guest, Paul – My Index of Slightly Horrifying Knowledge
Le Guin, Ursula K. – Finding My Elegy
Gundy, Jeff – Spoken Among the Trees
Hadaway, Meredith – Fishing Secrets…
Hafiz – Two Translations
Hamill, Sam – Measured by Stone
Hansen & Hasselstrom – Dirt Songs: A Plains Duet
Hardy, Myronn – Headless Saints
Harrington, Janice – Even the Hollow …
Harrison, Pamela – What to Make of It
Hartenbach, Mark – Beneath the …
Harvey, Matthea – Modern Life
Harvey, Suzanne Richardson – A Tiara for …
Haskins, Lola – Not Feathers Yet
Hawkey, Christian – Book of Funnels
Haven, Stephen – The Last Sacred Place in North America
Haven, Stephen – Dust & Bread
Hays, K.A. – Early Creatures, Native Gods
Hecht, Jamey – Limousine Midnight Blue
Heflin, Jack – Local Hope
Hembree, Carolyn – Skinny
Henn, Steve – And God Said: Let There Be Evolution!
Henry, Nancy A. – Our Lady of Let’s All Sing
Hernandez, David – Hoodwinked
Hiemstra, Marvin – French Kiss Destiny
Hilbert, Ernest – Sixty Sonnets
Hinton, David – Selected Poems of Li Po
Homan, Brandi – Two Kinds of Arson
Hostovsky, Paul – A Little in Love a Lot
Hughey, Elizabeth – Sunday Houses the …
Hunley, Tom C. – Octopus
Inez, Colette – Horseplay
Irwin, Mark – Tall If
James, David – She Dances Like Mussolini
Jamieson, Leland – In Vitro
Jackson, Gary – Missing You, Metropolis
Jedamus, Julith – The Swerve
Johnson, Larry – Veins
Johnston, Alastair – Elipsis (…)
Jones, Arlitia – Bandsaw Riots
Jones-Davis, Georgia – Blue Poodle
Kane, Julie – Rhythm and Booze
Kányádi, Sándor – In the Contemporary Tense
Karasek, Joseph – Love and the Ten …
Kasischke, Laura – Space, in Chains
Kaufman, Shirley – Ezekiel’s Wheels
Keelan, Claudia – Missing Her
Kelleher, Rose – Bundle O’ Tinder
Kempa, Rick – Ten Thousand Voices
Kerrigan, Nancy – The Voices
Keyes, Claire – The Question of Rapture
King, Robert – Old Man Laughing
King, Rosie – Sweetwater, Saltwater
Kingston, Katie – El Rio de las Animas …
Kinsella, John – Divine Comedy
Kinsella, John – Divine Comedy (2)
Klass, Margo & Frank Soos – Double Moon
klipschutz – This Drawn and Quartered Moon
Kohler, Sandra – The Country of Women
Knox, Janet Norman – Eastlake Cleaners …
Kohler, Sandra – Improbably Music
Kosk, Lidia – Sweetwater/Saltwater
Kosmicki, Greg – We Have Always Been …
Krok, Peter – Looking for the Eye
Krut, Robert – The Spider Sermons
Kumin, Maxine – Still to Mow
Kutchins, Laurie – Slope of the Child …
La Ganga, Annie – Stoners and Self- …
Laux, Dorinane – Book of Men
Lawrence, Jenifer Browne – One Hundred …
Leatherman, Stacie – Storm Crop
Lee, Karen An-hwei
Lee, Li-Young – Behind My Eyes
Lee, Li-Young – The Winged Seed
Lee, Stellasue – firecracker RED
Leon, Raina – Canticle of Idols
L’Esperance, Mari – The Darkened Temple
Levin, Lynn – Fair Creature Hour
Levin, Lynn – Miss Plastique
Levis, Larry – Elegy
Lightle, Drake A. – Self-Inflicted
Linehan, Moira – If No Moon
Lockie, Ellaraine – Blue Ribbons …
Lockward, Diane – What Feeds Us
Lockward, Diane – Temptation by Water
Luczaj, Sarah – An Urgent Request
Ludwin, Peter – A Guest in All Your Houses
Lukas, Krista – Fans of My Unconcious
Lumsden, Roddy – Roddy Lumsden Is Dead
Lynch, Alessandra – It Was a Terrible Cloud …
Lindenberg, Rebecca – Love, An Index
Maclay, Sarah – The White Bride
Madzirov, Nikola – Remnants of Another Age
Maloutas, Barbara – The Whole Marie
Manning, Maurice – Bucolics
Manning, Maurice – Lawrence Booth’s …
Marbrook, Djelloul – Far From Algiers
Mark, Sabrina Orah – The Babies
Marks, Janet – I Wanted a City
Martin, Camille – Looms
Matherne, Beverly – Lamothe-Cadillac
Maughn, James – The Arakaki Permutations
McBride, Timothy – The Manageable Cold
McCarthy, Jack – What I Saw
McDuffie, Brad – And the West Was Not …
McGlynn, Karyna – Alabama Steve
McIlroy, Leslie Anne – Liquid Like This
McKinney, Irene – Unthinkable
McIntosh, Sandy – 49 Guaranteed Ways …
McLaughlin, Damon – Exchanging Lives
Mergan, Alexa – Clear All the Rest …
Metzger, Deena – Ruin & Beauty
Meyerhofer, Michael – Leaving Iowa
Middlebrook, Diane – Her Husband: Ted Hughes & Sylvia Plath
Millar, Joseph – Overtime
Millar, Joseph – Blue Rust
Miller, Michael – Darkening the Grass
Miller, Sandra – Oriflamme,
Mills, Tyler – Tongue Lyre
Montgomery, Danielle (Dani) – Woman Write Poems
Moolman, Kobus – Light and After
Morrison, Rusty – Book of the Given
Muldoon, Paul – Horse Latitudes
Mulkey, Rick – Toward any Darkness
Mullany, Edward – If I Falter at the Gallows
Mullen, Laura – Dark Archive
Mulvania, Andrew – Also in Arcadia
Murphy, Rich – Voyeur
Nakayasu Sawako – So We Have Been Given …
Natal, Jim – Memory and Rain
Neale, Emma – The Truth Garden
Newberry, Jeff – Brackish
Nymark, Niki – A Stranger Here Myself
O’Connell, Richard – Irish Monastic Poems
O’Donnell, Angela Alaimo – Moving House
O’Donnell, Angela Alaimo – Saint Sinatra
Oles, Carole Simmons – Waking Stone
Olson, Christina – Before I Came Home Naked
O’Rourke, Meghan – Halflife
O’Rourke, Meaghan – Once
Orr, Leonard – Why We Have Evening
Ostriker, Alicia – Dancing at the Devil’s Party
Otten, Julie – Milk Chip Monday
Parker, Alan Michael – Long Division
Paschen, Elise – Bestiary
Pastan, Linda – Queen of a Rainy Country
Pastan, Linda – Traveling Light
Patchen, Kenneth – Two Books
Paul, Maggie – Borrowed World
Peake, Robert – The Silence Teacher
Pepper, Patric – Zoned Industrial
Perrine, Jennifer – The Body Is No Machine
Peterson, Allan – Omnivore
Phelan, Terry – Husk
Pietryzkowski, Marc – And the Whole …
Platt, Donald – My Father Says Grace
Pollitt, Katha – The Mind-Body Problem
Poteat, Joshua – Ornithologies
Potos, Andrea – Yaya’s Cloth
Potter, Christine – Zero Degrees …
Poudrier, Jason – Red Fields
Powell, D.A. – Useless Landscape or a Guide for Boys
Pritts, Nate – The Wonderfull Yeare
Prufer, Kevin – In a Beautiful Country
Rader, Dean – Work and Days
Randall, Jessy – A Day in Boyland
Randall, Jessy – Injecting Dreams into Cows
Randolph, Patrick – Father’s Philosophy
Ransick, Chris – Lost Songs and Last Chances
Rath, Jeff – The Waiting Room at the End …
Rathkamp, Josh – Some Night No Cars at All
Ray, David – The Music of Time
Raz, Hilda – All Odd and Splendid
Rechter, Judith – Wild West
Rhein, Christine – Wild Flight
Reeser, Jennifer – Sonnets from the Dark Lady
Reyes, Barbara Jane – Diwata
Rich, Susan – The Alchemist’s Kitchen
Rich, Susan – Cures Include Travel
Riggs, Sarah – The Autobiography of Envelopes
Roberts, Kim – The Kimnama
Roberts, Kim – Animal Magnetism
Robertson, Robin – The Wrecking Light
Rooney, Kathleen – Robinson Alone
Rooney, Kathleen – Oneiromance
Ross, Joseph – Meeting Bone Man
Rozewicz, Tadeusz – Sobbing Superpower
Rossi, Lee – Wheelchair Samurai
Ryan, Michael – This Morning
Sáenz, Benjamin A. – Dreaming the End of War
Salamun, Tomaz – The Blue Tower
Salcman, Michael – The Clock Made of Confetti
Salerno, Mark – Odalisque
Sanders, Mark – Here in the Big Empty
Sayeh, H.E. – The Art of Stepping Through Time
Scates, Maxine – Undone
Schott, Penelope Scambly – A Is for Anne
Schott, Penelope Scambly – Lillie Was a Goddess …

Schott, Penelope Scambly – Six Lips
Schott, Penelope Scambly – Six Lips (2)
Scott, Nancy – On Location
Serpas, Martha – The Dirty Side …
Shepard, Neil – This Far From the Source
Shipley, Vivian – All of Your Messages …
Siegell, Paul – Jambandbootleg
Simic, Charles – The Monster Loves His Labyrinth
Simpson, Jeff – Vertical Hold
Sinavaiana-Gabbard, Caroline – Alchemies …
Singer, Ron – A Voice for My Grandmother
Simic, Charles – Master of Disguises
Sloat, Sarah J. – Voice of a Minor Saint
Smith, Bruce – Devotions
Smith, Erin Elizabeth – The Fear of Being …
Smith, Joan Jobe – Picking the Lock …
Smith, Patricia – Shoulda Been Jimi Savannah
Smith, Patricia – Teahouse of the Almighty
Smith, R.T. – Outlaw Style
Smith, S.E. – I Live in a Hut
Snider, Clifton – Aspens in the Wind
Spang, Bruce – The Knott
Spears, Brian – A Witness in Exile
Spidel, Lianne – Chrome
Spidel, Lianne – What to Tell Joseme
Stallings, A.E. – Olives
Staples, Catherine – The Rattling Window
Starkey, David – A Few Things … About the Weasel
Steger, Ales – The Book of Things
Stephanie, S – What the News Seemed to Say
Stephenson, Hannah – In the Kettle, the Shriek
Stern, Gerald – Save the Last Dance
Stern Gerald – In Beauty Bright
Stewart-Nuñez, Christine – Unbound & Branded
Stone, Myrna – The Casanova Chronicles
Stone, Ruth – In the Next Galaxy
Stone, Ruth – What Love Comes To
Suermondt, Tim – Trying to Help …
Sullivan, David – Every Seed of the Pomegranate
Sullivan, Robert – Voices Carried My Family
Svalina, Mathias – Creation Myths
Sweeney, Chad – Arranging the Blaze
Sweeney, Chad – Parable of Hide and Seek
Sze-Lorrain, Fiona – Water the Moon
Takacs, Nancy – Juniper
Tan, Joel Barraquiel – Type O Negative
Taub, Yermiyahu Ahron – Insatiable …
Terris, Susan – Contrariwise
Thomas, Larry D. – The Fraternity of Oblivion
Thomas, Larry D. – The Light of Apricots
Thorburn, Matthew – This Time Tomorrow
Torrence-Thompson, Juanita – Breath-Life
Torrence-Thompson – Talking with Stanley Kunitz
Trinidad, David – The Late Show
Trull, Rhett Iseman – The Real Warnings
Twichell, Chase – Dog Language
Turner, Brian – Here, Bullet
Tyler, Kathleen – My Florida
Ungar, Barbara Louise – Charlotte Bronte…
Ungar, Barbara Louise – The Origin of …
Upton, Lee – Undid in the Land of Undone
Uschuk, Pamela – Crazy Love
Uschuk, Pamela – Crazy Love (2)
Uschuk, Pamela – Wild in the Plaza of Memory
Valentine, Jean – Break the Glass
Vinograd, Julia – America Is Hiding …
Waldrep,G.C. – Disclamor
Wallace, Joni – Blinking Ephemeral Valentine
Wallenstein, Barry – Drastic Dislocations
Wallin, Myna – A Thousand Profane Pieces
Weingarten, Roger – Premature Elegy …
Webb, Charles Harper – Shadow Ball
Weinberger, Florence – Sacred Graffiti
Wells, Sarah M – Pruning Burning Bushes
Western, Samuel – A Random Census of Souls
Wheeler, Lesley – Workshop Girl
Wheeler, Lesley – Heterotopia
Whitbeck, Caroline Noble – Our Classical …
White, Gail – Easy Marks
White, Mike – How to Make a Bird with Two Hands
Wilkens, Gary Charles – The Red Light …
Winslow,Rosemary – Green Bodies
Wisniewski, Mark – One of Us One Night
Wolf, Alyssa – Vaudeville
Woloch, Cecilia – Carpathia
Yaa de Villiers, Phillippa – Taller Than …
Yongming, Zhai – The Changing Room
young, d’bi – art on black
Zapruder, Matthew – Come on All You Ghosts
Zaro, Mariano – The House of Mae Rim
Aspects of Robinson: Homage to Weldon Kees
Beloved Community: The Sisterhood of Homeless …
Best American Poetry 2007 – ed. Heather McHugh
Best American Poetry 2006 – ed. Billy Collins
The Death of King Arthur: A New Verse Translation
Eating the Pure Light: Homage to Thomas McGrath
A Fast Life: The Collected Poems of Tim Dlugos
Fire on Her Tongue: An eBook Anthology …
Fire on Her Tongue: An eBook Anthology (2)
The Golden Age: Spanish Renaissance
Making Poems: Forty Poems with Commentary
Melopoeia (CD)
Natural Theologies – Denise Low, ed.
The Poems of Jesus Christ – tr. by Willis Barnstone
The Place that Inhabits Us
Saints of Hysteria: Collaborative American Poetry
Salmon: A Journey in Poetry
To Catch Life Anew: 10 Swedish Women Poets
isis x – ed. Allan Kolski Horwitz
Women on Poetry: Writing, Revising Publishing, and Teaching
Women Write Resistance

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