Cherokee Road Kill
What if the people you come from were from warring tribes, colonizer and slave, the indentured and the human trafficker? What if your own origin myth is one of violence and clash? This is the territory of Cherokee Road Kill, brave poems by the courageous, spiritually enlightened and linguistically acrobatic poet, Celia Bland.
Nightbloom and Cenote
“Who says you need five rivers/ to reach the underworld?” asks Leslie Contreras Schwartz in one of the title poems of her new collection Nightbloom and Cenote. In these rich, and layered, evocative poems, like “My Mother As a Child Surrounded by Night-Blooming Jasmine,” Contreras Schwartz shows us there are many routes indeed, as well as many underworlds.
Dispatches from Lesbian America
In North America there is a dearth of published lesbian literature but not a dearth of lesbian writing as evidenced by the recent anthology Dispatches from Lesbian America: 42 Short Stories and Memoir by Lesbian Writers. In the midst of diminishing lesbian spaces and silenced voices this collection is like a coming home for lesbians.
Some Bright Morning, I’ll Fly Away
I am one of those dreadful people who dog ear the books. Not the library ones – don’t freak out here. But my own. The best ones look a little scary. Like they might have been to Bosnia in certain years or have traveled up the Amazon on a raft. I find a phrase or passage I find enchanting and there I go, making little triangles on the page tops. And if I really, really love the writing, a pen will find its way into the equation. Then the book will become a super mess, pages fattened by folds and demarcated by my literary liner notes. These are the books I will go back to, time and again, to find a certain phrase, or to try and locate a certain feeling the writer inspired. They are topographical maps of their impression upon me, all bent up and beat by my affections.
Sober Cooking
In the heart of Lynn McGee’s collection of poetry, Sober Cooking, is a heart. A broken heart, both figuratively and literally. A full heart, same deal.
Illness and love and longing comingle and conspire in this book to give us that cross-hatched country where love and human frailty meet. In some poems, lovers practice the slow waltz of relationship building and losing. In others, the tenderness of blue hospital light and the bedsides of the sick and beloved find a special and arched attention. It is clear throughout that McGee knows the country of love. She knows the country of loss. This book is a map of each and the places they overlap.
What Else Could It Be: Ekphrastics and Collaborations
Ravi Shankar is a great poet, a scholar, and, over the years, became an editor to reckon with, at the literary magazine he founded, Drunken Boat. His poems are luminous and voluminous; they shimmer with ideas and color and a great love and curiosity for life, art and music. He is widely respected for his advocacy for the poets and people of Singapore; he is a prophet of the polyglot, perhaps diversity’s best muse.
Formation
On June 24, 1947, small businessman and hobbyist pilot Kenneth Arnold was on a business flight in his CallAir A-2 Mountain plane, when he saw something. An unnameable thing. What becomes the topic and title of Brooklyn poet Matthew Bialer’s epic poem, Formation.
In terse and clipped three and four word lines, bundled mostly in couplets and tercets and occasion longer stanzas, Bialer delivers up a narrative poem that traces events from the middle of the last century surrounding the origins of the phrase “flying saucer”. The New York-based literary agent, well-known street photographer, watercolorist and author of eleven previous books from such prestigious presses as Coffee House, effectively uses repetition and imagistic description, artfully (and interestingly) combined with a quasi-journalistic research of the topic. He has located both official and anecdotal materials recording these events from all sorts of sources and in the book he recounts various versions of these mysterious sightings.