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Reviews

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The Word on the Street by Paul Muldoon

  • Josh Cook
  • February 23, 2013
The Word on the Street is not Pulitzer Prize winner Paul Muldoon’s first work of writing for music. He wrote librettos for four Daren Hagen operas; Shining Bow, Vera of…
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Sightseer by Cynthia Marie Hoffman

  • Ryan Teitman
  • February 22, 2013
Cynthia Marie Hoffman’s excellent debut poetry collection, Sightseer, is part travelogue, part epistle, and part reclamation of the very idea of tourism. The winner of the Lexi Rudnitsky First Book…
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Hider Roser by Ben Mirov

  • Gina Myers
  • February 20, 2013
The poems that make up this collection are largely about the interior—the speakers alone with their thoughts.
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Reluctant Mistress by Anne Champion

  • Kristina Marie Darling
  • February 16, 2013
Anne Champion’s dazzling first book of poetry, Reluctant Mistress, offers readers a thought-provoking revision of the love lyric, rendering this rich literary tradition relevant to a postmodern cultural landscape. While…
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Things I Say to Pirates on Nights When I Miss You by Keely Hyslop

  • Michelle Salcido
  • February 15, 2013
Pirates plunder. Pirates navigate by wit and savvy and force. They intercept us somewhere between where we were and where we think we are going to end up. They are…
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Dark Elderberry Branch: Poems of Marina Tsvetaeva

  • Ellen Miller-Mack
  • February 13, 2013
Dark Elderberry Branch is a collaboration between two living poets and one who is dead but fully present. Ilya Kaminsky was born in Odessa (former Soviet Union, in the Ukraine),…
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Messages by Piotr Gwiazda

  • David Peak
  • February 9, 2013
When I was young and soft and I couldn’t fall asleep at night, I’d just lie there in bed, swallowing lumps of dread whose shape and taste I had no…
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Inside/Out: Selected Poems by Marilyn Buck

  • Barbara Berman
  • February 8, 2013
Every prison sentence represents compound tragedies involving family members and friends, the affect on the community where the crime was committed, and, of course, the prisoner whose sentence may or…
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Notturno by Gabriele D’Annunzio

  • Josh Cook
  • February 6, 2013
Gabriele D’Annunzio wrote Notturno on strips of paper big enough for just one line a piece, while his eyes were bandaged into near blindness, as he convalesced for over two…
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Butch Geography by Stacey Waite

  • Julie Marie Wade
  • February 5, 2013
Of all the stunning epigraphs Stacey Waite includes in Butch Geography—insights from William Carlos Williams and Judith Butler and Virginia Woolf—the most memorable and significant to me is the Japanese…
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Murder Ballad by Jane Springer

  • Kent Shaw
  • February 2, 2013
Because a book of poetry can do anything, I am going to propose that Jane Springer’s Murder Ballad open a hole in the Mississippi River. An impossible hole. Because the…
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Orphan Hours by Stanley Plumly

  • Andrew Field
  • February 1, 2013
Like a blue jay, thrush, or white-chested robin, darting in last light into leaves, twigs, or sky – after the rain, say, but before evening falls, when dark follows a…
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