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  • av Ashley Kaplan Brett Ashley Kaplan
    329,-

  • av David Miller
    279,-

    David Miller has been writing some of the most beautiful, adventurous and intelligent poetry he has ever written in the last few years, which makes the present (poetry is always in the present) a blessed time for readers like myself. Each new work astonishes and delights.

  • av Jim Dunn
    279,-

    The publication of Jim Dunn's first poetry book in more than a decade is reason to rejoice.

  • av Christie Towers
    279,-

  • av Thomas McGonigle
    299,-

    THE BULGARIAN PSYCHIATRIST arrived with a suitcase filled with ties, and knowing how to wear a dead man''s clothes, and how to initiate a son into the art of beating a prisoner to death and ... all of which did not prepare him for a life of listening in the USA.

  • av Toni Simon
    279,-

  • av Summer Brenner
    329,-

    Novellas that espouse anti-war history and social relationships in an intertwine of various narrations, sensibilities and cataracts of consciousness.We are in the hands of a first-rate storyteller.

  • av Cris Mazza
    329,-

  • av Stefania Irene Marthakis
    279,-

    The intoxicating poetics of Stefania Irene Marthakis' Case Memory explore the surreality of the quotidian, vividly portrayed here in an uncanny documentary form.

  • av Elise Houcek
    279,-

    ""The antithesis of nature, but au contraire, what I mean is wild n free." Get liberated by Tractatus, Elise Houcek's neo-bimbo limbo through "the alluring trash/meanness of the feminine." The atmospheric drama and high hilarity of Lara Glenum meets "Britney Spears's SOS. Or a signal to the wolves, the dogs, the moon, anything chrome." Immersive as a mansion of mirrors, Houcek plays through classic poem-stuff-beauty, memory, romance, and youth-until we arrive at the "joke-bed" of being, the fun house where language goes on holiday, gets a makeover, and comes home as philosophy"--

  • av Joshua Corey
    355,-

    By turns lyric and hypnotic, How Long is Now examines the delicate membranes separating past and present, authenticity of experience and transgressive truth. A Jewish-American writer, plagued by poetry and history, leaves his dying father and faithless marriage to travel to Germany and later Morocco to attend a William Burroughs conference, an unwritten novel on his plate.

  • - A Detroit Story
    av Barbara Henning
    395,-

  • av Neeli Cherkovski
    279,-

    In the age-old tradition of alphabet poems, from Psalm 119, to St. Augustine, to Chaucer, to Edward Lear and the present, Neeli Cherkovski''s ABC''S expand the poet''s singing voice, discovering remarkable musicality in the verse''s every turn. Throughout the sequence, Cherkovski delivers intoxicating melodies, forms of silence often dizzying in their new familiarity.

  • av Jenny Irish
    279,-

    What does Jenny Irish''s Tooth Box hold? A rabid girlhood of hybrid understanding, a quiet body yearning to express itself, and a wilderness of adults with mixed intentions. This book is stunning in its ability to move through and across form as a means to best express childhood discovery and trauma. Leaving readers wondering, where is my tooth box? What secret selves does my tooth box hold? Inventive, gut-wrenching, and full of strength, Irish''s work is in a category of its own.

  • av Blake Edward Hamilton
    355,-

    Dystopia meets Orpheus in Blake Edward Hamilton''s Hiraeth. Through near-future plots that explore a range of concepts from global warming to homelessness to familial bonding, Hamilton skillfully and seamlessly stretches our known reality to a possible scenario where reincarnation is an invitation one can accept

  • av Alexandria Peary
    279,-

    At the Poetry Foundation, Laura Mullen says of Alexandria Peary that she is "one of those wonderful writers who know how to stay, as de Kooning put it, ''on the edge of something.''" 

  • av Myah K Garrison
    279,-

    It is fitting for the youth of a nation to provide the freshest metaphor for citizenship. M. K. Garrison''s metaphor is a teenager''s therapy sessions and the local world around them.

  • av Edward Field & Alfred Chester
    389,-

  • av Mary Cardaras
    269,-

  • av Erik Fuhrer
    325,-

    Like Sartre's Nausea gives intention and personality to external reality, in Eye, Apocalypse, Fuhrer brings the Apocalypse to the kitchen table.

  • av Richard Martin
    329,-

    Dick Martin's lawless imagination consumes language at an alarming rate, seemingly heedless of conserving a literary future, and leaving in its wake reality-induced characters like drugs for addicts. ("Come on, let's get unreal.") Chapter & Verse is addicting, like good reading. The crowd of characters could describe your section for a night game at Fenway: Beau Smith and Zygote, Pauline Silvernail and Marty Schnitzel, Penelope Dee Slimwhall and Dusty Figure-Head.

  • av Natania Rosenfeld
    279,-

    Below the unadorned surface of Natania Rosenfeld's poetry, there swim archetypal or (as one title puts it) aboriginal elements which manifest in dreams and in dreamlike vignettes of private lives and of the public traumas of history. In their use of color to convey the ineffable, the poems in "The Blue Bed" are at once abstract and painterly.

  • av John Wall Barger
    279,-

    As its title suggests, Resurrection Fail is a worthy paradox, blending John Wall Barger's enviable economy of style with a luxury of spirit that glimmers beneath both his speaker's fetching enthusiasms and deep sorrows. These poems capture how the world's beauty and brutality are bound together; that we fail and-if we're lucky-find the will to resurrect ourselves over and over again. But for all this poet's clear seriousness of purpose, there's a vivid, often witty life force here that reminds me that I'm glad to be alive. I really loved getting to know this book and I bet you will, too.

  • av Pfister Patrick Pfister
    305,-

    Eric is a fraud as a sadhu. He has none of the appropriate credentials: no religion, no wisdom. His meditations are self-absorbed, nihilistic musings on the failures of both his aspirations and achievements.

  • av Alice Fogel
    279,-

  • av Ted Pearson
    279,-

    Pearson's scalpel-like critique of the voyage, each word a careful enunciation of where the line has been, there remains the constant question of where it will go and what it will become. For just as Emily Dickinson once asked, "Is my verse alive?" so Pearson, with every word, challenges us to face down (if quietly and with grace) the dormant future. And it isn't metaphor. Pearson is all-too-aware of the tenuous state of our condition, our art.

  • av Laurie Blauner
    325,-

    The precision of Blauner's beautifully executed and deeply imagined prose evokes the sense of dreams that are awake and stronger than reality, but are reality. We are presented with the archetypes of our age: the challenged; the world-weary, the homeless, the hallucinators, the would-be saviors manifesting in movements which permeate society and truth, the anxious, the hopeful, the neglected, the lost. Blauner moves us through her novel in linguistic lightning strikes, illuminating and penetrating, but never lingering. Out of Which Came Nothing is a stunning book, a book not so much about the change that is coming as the change that has come.

  • av Henri Droguet
    305,-

    Henri Droguet's savvy derangements of language call for a super-savvy translator, and found that prestidigitator in Alexander Dickow. With neologisms, internal-intestinal rhymes, arcane diction, a fierce wit, Droguet creates dreamscapes at once linguistically fraught and true to his North Atlantic habitat. His song, he says in "Soliloquy," is "spasm hemorrhage/ epiphanic and black." These are poems of mortal intensity.

  • av Brad Baumgartner
    299,-

    Stylinaut is a portmanteau term for a modern-day astronaut turned stylite (or ascetic "pillar dwelling" saint). This figure, who is at once within and without our present moment in time, commits to writing as he ascends-and lives upon-the tiers of a desert pillar. It is a hybrid collection of philosophy/poetics that encodes seven separate but interrelated sections consisting of meditative fragments, experimental fiction, poems, and aphorisms. The book focuses on the liminal movement of the stylinaut's alternating experience of dukkhic suffering and its corollary nirvanic bliss, with the ascent culminating at seventy-seven feet above the ground, and ultimately asks us to speculatively open ourselves to the maximal densities of life and all the strangeness/sweetness it tends to encapsulate.

  • - Books 5 - 8
    av hastain jj hastain
    599,-

    "Priest/ess is hastain's epic of transitional consciousness-an over-arching poetics that spans a variety of means to forward trans formation. Obvious themes within any social frame are brought to a shape-shifted ecstatic healing-from cast-out normative body register to flaccid spiritualism. Populated with the usual archetypes of epic human consciousness-male/female, mother/father, light/dark-the Priest/ess books convey us to a hidden history of transparent magics. A collection of notes, songs, poems and diaristic entries sourced from near and far mythologies, move narration into a transcendental and uncategorizable masterwork surprising on all levels"--

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