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Reviews

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“Baltics” by Tomas Tranströmer

  • Jim Zukowski
  • November 16, 2012
Tomas Tranströmer’s Baltics, a long poem, first appeared in 1974, but this time around Samuel Charters has added a new afterword to his original translation, and his wife Ann Charters has…
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“The Apothecary’s Heir” by Julianne Buchsbaum

  • Adam Tavel
  • November 14, 2012
A winning selection in the 2011 National Poetry Series, Julianne Buchsbaum’s The Apothecary’s Heir interrogates the wildness of nature, the decadence of urban sprawl, and the necessity of myth and…
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“As Long As Trees Last” by Hoa Nguyen

  • Dan Shewan
  • November 9, 2012
Seattle’s renowned independent press, Wave Books, recently published Hoa Nguyen’s third full-length collection of poems, As Long As Trees Last. In it, Nguyen once again dares to experiment with form,…
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“50 American Plays” by Matthew and Michael Dickman

  • David Peak
  • November 7, 2012
I’ve visited exactly half of the states that make up our federal constitutional republic. I’m counting states that I’ve lived in, vacationed in, or merely driven through. Some of the…
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“What Is Amazing” by Heather Christle

  • Barbara Berman
  • November 2, 2012
What Is Amazing by Heather Christle is another illustration of my frustration with the word “critic,” why I think “appreciator” is a closer approximation and why I’m still open to…
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Crossing State Lines: An American Renga edited by Bob Homan and Carol Muske-Dukes

  • Dean Rader
  • October 31, 2012
I first discovered Renga: A Chain of Poems (Brazillier, 1972) in a used bookstore in New York during my first year of graduate school. I was transfixed.
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“The Girls of Peculiar” by Catherine Pierce

  • Brynn Downing
  • October 26, 2012
There is a canon of cinema that revolves around girls leaving girlhood, and finding themselves young and nubile, ready (so they think) to embrace their future as women. There’s the…
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“Robinson Alone” by Kathleen Rooney

  • Brian Spears
  • October 24, 2012
First things first: you don’t have to be a fan of Weldon Kees to enjoy this book. Shameful confession: until I read the note that precedes the table of contents,…
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Selected Translations by W. S. Merwin

  • Joe Winkler
  • October 19, 2012
The translation of poetry requires justification. Not necessarily for conceptual reasons, but because the experience of reading translated poetry however transcendent and beautiful always feels lacking, incomplete, like living in…
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“How to Survive a Hotel Fire” by Veronica Wong

  • April Naoko Heck
  • October 17, 2012
The princess is not a poet, but we never forget that she is written by one, a very good one indeed.
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“Roleplay” by Juliana Gray

  • Jeannine Hall Gailey
  • October 12, 2012
In Juliana Gray’s Roleplay, though the book has its share of formal verse – triolets, sonnets, etc – don’t be surprised if you run into a zombie or two. Roleplay…
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“The Children” by Paula Bohince

  • Virginia Konchan
  • October 10, 2012
The plosive thrills and quietly mournful tenor of the finely-wrought poems Paula Bohince’s The Children (her second full-length collection) reward enormously upon first encounter, and only more so upon subsequent…
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