Reviews

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With courage and poetic virtuosity — Ruth Edgett’s review of Kelly Watt’s The Weeping Degree: How Astrology Saved Me from Suicide

The Weeping Degree: How Astrology Saved Me from Suicide
Kelly Watt
Wild Rising Press (August 2024)
110 pp

With a writerly deftness that calls to mind an artist suggesting a complete image in a few pencil strokes, Watt manages to tell us just enough of her now-remembered childhood that we can carry the knowledge without it weighing us down. In free verse, shape poems and micro essays, Watt gives us just enough of where she’s been and where she’s going.

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Aching Strangeness: A Review of Lisa Johnson Mitchell’s SO AS NOT TO DIE ALONE by Allison Renner

So as Not to Die Alone
By Lisa Johnson Mitchell
Finishing Line Press (January 2024)
70 pp.

Mitchell navigates the strains and tensions within families with sensitivity, delving into themes of resentment, grief, and the weight of responsibility. Through moments of humor and honesty, she deftly balances the complexities of these relationships, offering readers a nuanced portrayal of human connection.

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The Two-ness of Things, a review of Matthew Minicucci’s DUAL by Carlene Gadapee

Dual
Matthew Minicucci
Acre Books ( 2023)
102 pp.

The speaker considers the notion of duality, how it is the “not singular, not plural of things.” This idea controls the collection; we are charged with contemplating the two-ness of things, how they fit, the interplay between them, but as both separate and distinct parts.

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A Swirl of Galaxies: a review of Brian Turner’s the wild delight of wild things by Miriam O’Neal

the wild delight of wild things
by Brian Turner
Alice James Books
100 pages

Like a series of book reports on essays out of Scientific American, we begin to learn in a haphazard way that we learn to trust, about the world we walk on, the water we swim in, the clouds we pass through as we course across this blue and green planet. But in each mode of transit Turner returns us again and again to our own water, air, fire, and light—to our own eyes and to seeing.

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Eclipsed by Hunger by Jessica Binkley

Feed Me
By Erika Nichols-Frazer
Casper Press 2022
224 pages

Erika Nichols-Frazer’s memoir, Feed Me eases the reader into an up-close journey of what happens when a young girl’s relationship to food, a body’s nourishment, is interrupted.

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Universal Concerns by Carlene Gadapee

Tiny Extravaganzas
By Diane Mehta
Arrowsmith Press 2023
113 pages

Language that shimmers and reinvents, words that challenge and direct the reader’s attention, lush settings and private musings—these are all foundational components in Diane Mehta’s work, Tiny Extravaganzas.

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Silvered Notes and Snapshots by Les Schofield

Exhibitions: Essays on Art and Atrocity
Jehanne Dubrow
University of New Mexico Press
147 pages

Imagined as six galleries in an atelier, Exhibitions displays her unflinching analysis of the ways specific artworks coexist within the atrocities of their time. On exhibit are the creations of writers, poets, artists, dramatists, architects, glassblowers, and craftsmen contextualized by the terrors they witnessed, endured, or inherited.

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Modest Ceremonies: John West's Lessons and Carols by Mark Wallace

Lessons and Carols
by John West
Eerdmans Publishing Co.
207 pp.

Order is a luxury, it seems to me. Being able to count on what will happen when, and in what way, is something many people would like to take for granted, as it carries with it the promise of security and even a measure of control.

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