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Reviews

760 posts
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Love, An Index, by Rebecca Lindenberg

  • Spenser Davis
  • May 30, 2012
Love, An Index tells a beautiful and heartbreaking story, and at the heart of it is some of the most original and interesting poetry that I’ve come across in a…
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Plume, by Kathleen Flenniken

  • Jeannine Hall Gailey
  • May 26, 2012
Newly appointed Washington State Poet Laureate, Kathleen Flenniken, recently released a second book called Plume, part of the Pacific Northwest Poetry Series of University of Washington Press. I will admit,…
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Vanishing-Line, by Jeffrey Yang

  • Josh Cook
  • May 25, 2012
In Vanishing-Line, Jeffrey Yang writes, “But the birches of Yennecott/ recall his word-spirits.” Rather than using lines or stanzas as the basic unit of expression in this collection, Yang writes…
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The Grief Performance, by Emily Kendal Frey

  • Virginia Konchan
  • May 18, 2012
Emily Kendal Frey’s compact, laconic poems from her first collection, The Grief Performance, outwit, outlast, and, eponymously, outperform not only death, but failure, ennui, and despair. How, you ask? For starters, the…
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Inmost, by Jessica Fisher

  • T Fleischmann
  • May 16, 2012
Many of the most interesting lyric books of the past few years have attempted a sort of reckoning between contemporary life and the reality of ceaseless war. Nick Flynn’s The…
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Coming to That by Dorothea Tanning

  • Leah Umansky
  • May 12, 2012
Dorothea Tanning’s Coming to That is a book full of imagination, creativity, and intellect.
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Between the Crackups, by Rebecca Lehmann

  • Melissa Ginsburg
  • May 11, 2012
Rebecca Lehmann’s collection, Between the Crackups, is a glittering, furious book. Many of its poems inhabit a childhood world full of violence and anger. Others showcase adult voices that range…
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Voices of the Rainbow: Contemporary Poetry by Native Americans

  • Ellen Miller-Mack
  • May 9, 2012
Visiting the Taos Pueblo (“an ancient community continuously inhabited for 100 years”) on San Geronimo Day, I was frightened by the Sacred Clowns (Koshares). The list of rules for visitors…
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The Poems of Jesus Christ, by Willis Barnstone

  • Barbara Berman
  • May 5, 2012
Born in 1927, Willis Barnstone is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Comparative Literature at Indiana University and an admired translator . His rendering of The Poems of St John of the…
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Girl In Cap and Gown by Harriet Levin

  • Lois Bassen
  • May 4, 2012
Filmgoers this year who saw the documentary The Cave of Forgotten Dreams in 3-D (or not) entered the prehistoric Chauvet caves of Southern France in a stunning modern way. The…
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Gaze by Christopher Howell

  • Joey Connelly
  • May 2, 2012
In the opening poem of Christopher Howell’s Gaze, “Home Stretch,” he concludes with, “Receive me. Here are my silver / wings, in accordance with custom. Inside of them / leaves…
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A Brilliant Button Without Any Cloth

  • Lisa Wells
  • April 28, 2012
The promised west in The Oregon Trail IS The Oregon Trail is an amalgam of bootstrap romance, wilderness bordered by suburban sprawl, death, and the ferocity of natural processes.
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