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Lyrical and semi-surreal, The Fifth Woman traces the ebbs and flows of a young woman’s life fractured by grief.
This poetry debut details the death of the speaker's father after brain surgery, confronting personal and political grief.
Kathleen Ossip’s much-anticipated third collection of poems presents an unsentimental elegy to a mother figure and recently deceased cultural icons.
Gay and Jewish men struggle to navigate conservative communities in Georgia and the Deep South.
Book-length essay chronicles Jackson Pollock, Jack Kerouac, and the origin of America’s highway system.
Amelia Martens's prose poems sparkle with dark wit, moving from the mundane to the metaphysical with plainspoken lyricism.
In The Heronry, acclaimed poet Mark Jarman explores spiritual engagement with the natural world through lyric portraiture and meditation.
Cleopatra Mathis's best bookpoems that counter absence with dogs, ducks, and spiders in the wilderness just beyond her back door.
A searing interrogation of identity, masculinity, and contemporary culture, Post Traumatic Hood Disorder's references range from Icarus to Sir Mix-A-Lot.
Louisa Ermelino's stories follow strong-willed women on adventures at home and abroad, from boisterous Italian-American neighborhoods to India and Afghanistan.
Highly lauded debut reads like a fourth book, with Plath/Sexton overtones. Brash, swiftly veering lines; fusion of profane and sublime.
These sensuous poems explore love, desire, ecology, queerness in the 'natural' world, loss, and LGBTQ lineage and community.
Possibility translates life's disordered events into the orderly happiness of art. Subjects include manatees, Henry Adams, Texas, Proust, and Vertigo.
Parables, allegories, jokes, riddles, and a full librettoJeff Dolven’s debut collection gives us accessible lyrics and a multitude of pleasures.
The short and sweet story of a Pulitzer–Prize winning poet’s long love affair with his wife.
Like rigorous philosophy, Trey Moody’s poems begin with immediate evidence, then move outward, examining nature, weather, history, and ghosts.
Kiki Petrosino’s sophomore effort far exceeds our expectations with wildly inventive lyrics on marriage, eating, and ancestors both dreamed and
Kasischke's surreal stories verge on sci fi -- ghost girls in the backyard and changelings in the kitchen.
A young man probes the mystery of his past, including abandonment by his parents and a childhood in an orphanage.
Kimiko Hahn trains her eye on the commonplace-clothespins, bees, papaya, a sponge, fire-revealing their essence with evocative concision.
With straightforward syntax and diction Zandi’s poems find their way to fresh sound and unexplored regions of the interior.
Part biographic inquiry, part lyric portraiture, radio producer Shawn Wen reanimates world-renowned mime Marcel Marceau's silent art in vibrant language.
An unusual and powerful war narrative told in poetry, focusing on the psychological battles suffered by parents, lovers, and friends on the home front.
Pop culture gets the James Tate treatment in poems that offer a gimlet eye to the disappointments of the world.
A disquieting exploration of loss during wartime. Stories span imaginary cities and true-to-life family tragedy.
Hernandez' third collection is blunt and undeceived. His odes to mortality are laced with wit and sadness rising like helium.
In 11 darkly comic stories, women isolated by geography, emotion, or circumstance cut imperfect paths to peace.
A trailblazer of the contemporary essay, Purpura meditates on existential subjects as diverse as eagles, irony, racially divided neighborhoods, and the idea of beauty.
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