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Capp Road is a brutal, unflinching portrait of small town America. Here, Matt Borczon trains his laser-focus upon the claustrophobic, suffocating, sinking feeling of not being able to escape the nowhere fate that threatens, at every turn, to capture us like bugs under glass. What makes this book work, really work at a fundamental level, is Borczon's minimalistic storytelling approach. The broken characters that wander Capp Road are neither good nor bad - they simply are. They are doing the best they can with the fucked-up situation they were born into. Their hopes, dreams, fears, stories, and journeys through madness and redemption, through Borczon's trademark smashed-up sentence narrative, becomes ours. Capp Road is not a book to be read - it is meant to be ingested, injected, scraped from under our fingernails and shaken off like dust. This book is a triumph. -- Wolfgang Carstens, Epic Rites Press
"As a social worker I have a deep interest in Matt Borczon's work. I hope it helped him, and know that it assists others who don't possess his writing skills. From Saved Rounds which allowed me to know that social workers and those in the field of psychology have been far too slow to grasp the concept Matt spills out right from the start. In "Afghanistan 2010" we get a glimpse of the stoic mindset of those who serve our country. For, "The Last Poem" Matt rips the curtains back and allows those blinds to snap up to the ceiling, to show everyone how war has affected his beloved wife and family. It was in "Riding An Imaginary Horse", that I received the gut punch or a pretty pink nightmare, compared to the memories and dreams that still sit on that saddle. No one can tell these stories so necessary for understanding our veterans, better than Matt. His gift is the ability to knock us down and drag us through the ravages of war. The poem "The War" made me tear up and then lose my battle on the last stanza. I moved on to "Veterans Day" and had to seriously stop and make myself breathe. This book couldn't stick to the speed limit and never gave you a break as it raced right on through." -Thasia Ann, author of Pam's Jacket, Guerilla Genisis Press"In Saved Rounds Matt Borczon leads us through the night-mare of what is PTSD. This book is full of power packedpoems that lets the reader feel the pain and the determinationof countless amputees, the screams and cries of the Afghanchildren and a Navy nurse and his family trying to heal. Donot thank him for his service or for being a hero but insteadthank him for these poems, the blood he left on these pagesand for being a voice for those who can't." -Scot Young, author of Brautigan Meets Bukowski, All Around Cowboy and publisher at the Rusty Truck and Deuce Coupe."I've long been envious of the heartbreaking devastationof Matt Borczon's poetry, though perhaps not of theexperiences that led him to write it. Matt has complainedthat many editors don't care for his spare vertical style, butin the case of poems about war, let us remember what outlawpoet Todd Moore said about poems that "hang down thepage like long black fuses..." These are poems waiting foryou to light them." -Brian Rihlmann"This book is a punch to the gut. It hits you where you live.Borczon wastes no words in describing the visible and theunseen scars that war inflicts upon its survivors. The poemsare tight, intense snapshots of the poet's experience whileserving in Afghanistan. Brutal but not sensationalistic, thepower of these poems is undeniable. Once you begin reading,you won't be able to stop. This should be required readingin our turbulent times." -Kevin M. Hibshman, editor, FEARLESS poetry zine
American Poetry by Matt Borczon and Jay Miner published by Rust Belt Press.
Body Bag should be required reading for every President and member of Congress considering sending their citizens to war. These poems, none more than four lines, are dollops of horror, heartbreak, endurance, humanity, vulnerability and a whole lot of love. Although I wish Borczon didn't have to write Body Bag, I am grateful for this book and I am grateful knowing Matt is out there using his immense artistic skills to give us an idea of how it was and what it's like.- Bob Pajich, author of The Trolleyman
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