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Reviews

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“The Fact of the Matter” by Sally Keith

  • Amy Silbergeld
  • October 5, 2012
In The Fact of the Matter, moments are artifacts to be labeled and sorted. The poems are not an attempt to make sense – of time, of history, and of…
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“The Crossed Out Swastika” by Cyrus Cassells

  • Dan Shewan
  • October 3, 2012
Cyrus Cassells’ fifth collection of poems, The Crossed-Out Swastika, treads the familiar yet treacherous and muddy ground of World War II. For a less skilful poet, such hostile territory may…
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You and Three Others Are Approaching a Lake by Anna Moschovakis

  • Collin Schuster
  • September 28, 2012
Because approaching a lake is a strange thing, especially in the opening pages. Small detours abound.
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“In Time’s Rift” by Ernst Meister

  • Alex Estes
  • September 26, 2012
In Heidegger’s essay ‘The Nature of Language’ he poses the question “When does language speak itself as language?” He answers: “Curiously enough, when we cannot find the right word for…
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Thunderbird by Dorothea Lasky

  • Spenser Davis
  • September 21, 2012
Thunderbird is one of the more traditional collections I’ve come across recently, both in tone and in form. Lasky doesn’t experiment heavily with form, preferring to stick to free verse…
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Having Been an Accomplice by Laura Cronk

  • Leah Umansky
  • September 19, 2012
Cronk’s Having Been an Accomplice is layered in the “imagined” of the real world, no matter the continent.
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I Live in a Hut by S. E. Smith

  • Jeff Alessandrelli
  • September 12, 2012
J.D. Salinger’s Holden Caulfield famously said that the mark of a great author is whether, after reading their work, you want to call them up to talk, want to gab…
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Letters From Robots by Diana Salier

  • Joey Connelly
  • September 7, 2012
I am not impressed with writers who refuse to use punctuation or capitalization; that gimmick has been famously used already, so now it comes across as lazy and unoriginal. Also,…
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Fragile Acts by Allan Peterson

  • Barbara Berman
  • September 5, 2012
The cover of Allan Peterson’s Fragile Acts, in print and as eBook, is as visually compelling as the cover of Rebecca Lindenberg’s Love, An Index, the first poetry selection in…
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Dispatch From the Future by Leigh Stein

  • Joe Winkler
  • August 31, 2012
I don’t think I ever laughed with a poem. Sometimes I chuckle at a clever turn of phrase, or at a shared sentiment, or a little idiosyncrasy that I thought…
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Uselysses by Noel Black

  • Josh Cook
  • August 29, 2012
Uselysses by Noel Black is a collection of five, distinct, short books of poetry. The first three books collect introspective and self-conscious poems common in contemporary poetry, distinguishing themselves with…
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Traveler by Devin Johnston

  • Scott Challener
  • August 24, 2012
“One can no more locate the unconscious impulse to a poem among the synapses of the brain,” Devin Johnston writes in the preface to Precipitations, his study of the relationship…
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