Prolific Books

Full length books by individual authors.



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A Poverty of Words by Frederick Pollack

A Poverty of Words by Frederick Pollack

Poetry by Frederick Pollack What Are People Saying About This Book? “In his rich new collection, Frederick Pollack has opinions and observations about everything. Pollack is ‘didactic’ in the very best sense of the word—and learn I did from his unflinching, never ingratiating poems.” Jane Shore (Professor, George Washington University) “If you’ve never read this poet, prepare for one of the greatest breakthroughs in your reading life. Yes, Frederick Pollack is that good.” Robert McDowell (Co-Founder and editor, Story Line Press) “I enjoy Fred Pollack’s poems, and consider them necessary because they do what poetry should do, grapple with the important. When I dwell on his poems, I can see the images leave the page and come to life.” Daniel J. Langton (Professor, SF State; winner, Edgar Allan Poe Award) “Pollack has a talent for lines that will draw you up short. It’s the kind of thing you might think couldn’t be sustained through the sheer volume of poetry in this collection, but you’d be wrong. Every poem deserves a second look.” Krishan Coupland (Editor, Neon Literary Magazine) About the Poet Frederick Pollack was born in Chicago; he lived for many years in California but it didn’t take. He now lives and teaches in Washington, DC. Pollack’s books, The Adventure and Happiness, are both book-length narrative poems (Story Line Press). More of his work can be found in various journals and publications each year. His updated biography is available on Amazon.com. Pollack’s voice belongs to neither the navelgazing mainstream nor the poststructuralist avant-garde. A Poverty of Words Poetry by Frederick Pollack Copyright © 2015, Frederick Pollack Details: 6x9 Perfect Bound. Paperback. 146 Pages. All Rights Reserved; No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or in any means – by electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise – without prior written permission from the author or publisher. ISBN-13: 978-1632750198 ISBN-10: 1632750198 Published by Prolific Press Inc., Harborton, VA. Edited by: Glenn Lyvers Cover Painting by: Phylis Geller Cover Photo by: James Mahoney Author Photo by: Paul Kaller Library of Congress Control Number: 2014956929 Printed in the USA.
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An Unwalled City by Genevieve Betts

An Unwalled City by Genevieve Betts

Poetry by Genevieve Betts. An Unwalled City is Betts' debut collection, filled with rich and iconic imagery. Her world is rich with humor and reflection. An Unwalled City is an approachable poetry collection that can be enjoyed by everyone. Whether writing of childbirth, caring for an adventurous pet tarantula as a child in Arizona, or reading Sendak’s A is for Alligator to her son as, on the other side of the wall next door, a murder-suicide unfolds in Brooklyn, Genevieve Betts is an empiricist of the im/material world, crossing real borders in that imaginary country called memory, traveling across states lines of the mind and heart. An Unwalled City opens with an epigraph from Epicurus about life being a city without walls of protection from death, and in wry, stark poems, Betts observes life and death in the balance with a keen and unblinking eye. “How will death come for me?” one speaker, a new mother after a hard birthing, asks. The answer is startling and fresh: “like a giant black-eyed moth / closing its white velvet / around the winter of my body.” An Unwalled City is a breath-taking debut volume. Cynthia Hogue, author of Revenance In Genevieve Betts' An Unwalled City, her human babies are animalish creatures while desert insects and spiders are cared for as carefully as the babies. A collection as much about her family as it is about Arizona, we are given a world in which "latch key was just another way to say freedom," and in which poisonous giant desert centipedes that jump at her face during sex are quickly termed "centipedus coitus interuptus." This book will make you laugh aloud, but it will also make you feel tender about all junky, ugly, poor, poisonous, regular, and vulnerable things of this world that Betts so tenderly notices. Sarah Vap, author of End of the Sentimental Journey
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Before There Were Bones by William G. Davies Jr

Before There Were Bones by William G. Davies Jr

William G. Davies Jr. explodes with this lengthy book of short poems, concise and deliberate, with compression that reads effortlessly. With a voice as familiar as a remembered friend, Davies writes about the world, inviting us to see it as he does, through the lens of a masterful poet at the top of his game. Finally approachable poetry we can all call our own. Praise for Before There Were Bones "William G. Davies Jr. gives us small, concise, clear minded poems that shine and sing with clarity. "Evening settles like a soft comb through mahogany hair..." We enter each poem as an intimate guest, welcomed like, "the clatter of supper dishes stacked one on top of the other, still warm." The reader will come away with this sense of being there and being loved through all the different life experiences. Well worth the read." Irene Koronas Poetry Editor: Wilderness House Literary Review "A collection of short, sharp jabs at the world, each poem a sliver of wisdom distilled, arresting as a face suddenly appearing in a dusty window." Justin Lowe Bluepepper
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Body Politic by Rich Murphy

Body Politic by Rich Murphy

Body Politic adds to the conversation of a generation with poetry that invokes thoughtful reflection. Whether you read for the love of poetry, to cheer and contemplate your beliefs, or simply to get a better understanding of other viewpoints, Body Politic delivers stunning poetry and deeply interesting reflections on relevant topics today. This is a must read! Praise for Rich Murphy! Rarely do I like explicitly political poetry, yet Richard Murphy may have convinced me otherwise. Murphy shows in Body Politic how poems can be polemical without being didactic, philosophical without throwing out any of a poems linguistic or moral core. Murphy manages to be both heartfelt and playful, ironic and sincere, language-driven and wild with the material world. Truly worth savoring a few times both as individual poems and as an entire collection. - C. Derick Varn, editor of Former People The poems found in Body Politic are the essential poems of today, a persistent and passionate fugue, an irony, something we need, an elixir for the malaise of paralysis that has engulfed an increasingly terrified humanity. We only have to consider the facts. We need to read these poems. - Michael Rothenberg Rich Murphy’s Body Politic delivers a litany of lyrical and surreal protests against the “conspicuous unsaid [that] rules the state for the mind” of a nation addicted to perpetual war and processed news. Murphy’s songs of struggle are strong medicine for “the subject and the drunken, resilient question mark behind the eyes.” Body Politic is a diagnosis and antidote for the cancer of our times. “No one with a breath escapes.” These are poems of resistance and revival. — W. Scott Howard, University of Denver
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Formation by Tammy T. Stone

Formation by Tammy T. Stone

Tammy T. Stone, BJ, MA, is a Canadian writer and photographer currently residing in Japan. Her poetry and short stories have appeared in various literary journals magazines, and she also writes about the arts and wellness for several publications internationally. She is at work on a novella and a novel. This is her first poetry collection. “Formation” begins with the attempt to engage with a lost childhood through words – but ultimately, it is a search for something deeper, the mining of then and now for a love that hovers, ever elusive. The search inspired a journey eastward, where inner and outer worlds collide. In their form, content and spirit, the poems in this collection reflect the varied landscapes of Southeast Asia, India and Japan. “Formation” takes the reader into the heart of the poet’s reminiscences and passions as they mesh with the lively physical, natural and spiritual spaces encountered.
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Free Fire Zone by Dennis Maulsby

Free Fire Zone by Dennis Maulsby

Also available for Amazon Kindle. Welcome to the Free Fire Zone, also known as a free kill zone. In Vietnam, it was enemy territory, all the friendlies and neutrals moved out. Anyone found in such an area was considered hostile, a legitimate target that could be killed on sight, no questions asked. Each of the sixteen stories in this book originate from this zone, any subject, any genre fair game. The short stories are bound together by the main character, Rod Teigler, traveling through his life beginning in the mid-sixties Vietnam and extending to the current day. Teigler’s war experiences, helped along by government experimentation, leave him with a severe personality disorder. Fear or anger turn the hero into something you don’t want to meet up with in broad daylight let alone in a dark alley.
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Near Death / Near Life by Dennis Maulsby

Near Death / Near Life by Dennis Maulsby

Near Death / Near Life strikes a meaningful and tender balance between the appreciation for life's poignant moments, and the human experience of war, both as a construct and a memory. Poetry: 114 Pages, Paperback Dennis Maulsby is a retired bank president living in Ames, Iowa with his wife, Ruth, a retired legal secretary, and his dog, Wally, a retired CIA operative. His poetry and short stories have appeared in Lyrical Iowa, The Des Moines Register, The North American Review, Spillway, Haiku Journal, The Hawai'i Pacific Review, The Briarcliff Review, and other journals. Maulsby is a native of Iowa and a graduate of Marshalltown High School and Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa. A U.S. Army Vietnam veteran, he served with the 25th infantry Division while in country. He is a past president of the Iowa Poetry Association. "To read Dennis Maulsby's powerful, uncompromising poems is to inhabit the vivid, surreal dream of a soldier--to see the world as he, a Vietnam veteran, did, many years ago. The poems are about the horror of war, and loss, and the road back to civilian life, described in hauntingly beautiful and precise images that you cannot forget. As they bear witness to the reality of war and its lasting effects, they are a triumph of honesty and the power of art. Read them." Karen E. Bender, author of Refund "In his newest collection of poetry, Near Death/Near Life, Dennis Maulsby captures a devastating universe of visceral juxtapositions with acuity and grace. His sensual images alternate between the raw and highly polished, move from being softly lyrical to staccato-rapid firing, blend unique jazz riffs with discordant turbulence. The language is compelling, interestingly fresh, concise and layered. Maulsby's poetry is intense and immediate, and can leave the reader breathless as memories of war-time nightmares take on tender overtones, but he intersperses well-crafted haiku, musical interludes, historical fragments and love poems throughout his book to offer moments of respite from the symphonic killing fields he depicts. Complicated, intelligent, moving, fascinating, horrifying—Maulsby's book is a rare glimpse into the creative spirit struggling to reconcile the brutal realities of death with the compassionate beauty of life." Marilyn Baszczynski, President of the Iowa Poetry Association "Maulsby's third collection of poetry begins in violence and ends in an aria, carrying the reader along in an intimate and tender journey through decades of love, life, war and peace. Along the way, we touch on all the things we've come to expect from Maulsby--haiku, Vietnam, deep imagery, capital-R Romanticism, etc--but we also see an expansion both in the scope of the content and in the exuberant and musical prosody. Settle in, fasten your seatbelt, and plan to spend some time with this book!" Jim Coppoc, Senior Lecturer, Iowa State University Author of Manhattan Beatitude; Reliquary; and Blood, Sex & Prayer
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Scudder's Gorge by Geoffrey Craig

Scudder's Gorge by Geoffrey Craig

Scudder’s Gorge shines a harsh light on what man is capable of doing to his fellow man, beginning with the day of the “bomb” in Hiroshima and then moving backwards in time to Eighteenth Century Vermont to a village founded by post-Revolutionary settlers. Nestled between pine-clad ridges, the valley is home to a small band of Abenaki. The settlers and Native Americans trade with each other and live in peace until a love affair blossoms between a young Abenaki and the daughter of a village elder. A crime reverberates down the generations, leading Everett Scudder and his daughter, Roseanne, to struggle for the dignity of all people. Geoffrey Craig’s fiction, poetry and drama have appeared in numerous literary journals. He has received two Pushcart Prize nominations. Wilderness House Literary Review serialized his verse novel, The Brave Maiden, and his novella, “Snow”. Four of his full-length plays (one co-authored) and nine of his one-acts have been produced. He has directed productions of five of his plays with three more in rehearsals. Geoffrey has an MBA and an MA in history. He served in the Peace Corps and had a successful career in banking before turning to writing. Scudder’s Gorge is his first prose novel.
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Spy Pond by Ed Meek

Spy Pond by Ed Meek

Praise for Spy Pond “In this rich collection, Ed Meek “pull[s] us back from the edge” (as in his poem, On Edge). Compelling and diverse, whether his subject is the Boston Marathon bombing, addressing Robert Frost, considering silence, love, loss, or the Iraqi war—he manages to pull me in and then set me back down again with deeper knowledge, contemplation, and perspective.” ~Cynthia Brackett-Vincent, publisher of the Aurorean poetry journal; author, Questions About Home "Ed Meek's poems give a slap to the reader's complacency. Whether it is a wild coyote stalking its domestic prey on the broad and manicured lawns of the suburbs, or his contemplation of our inevitable decline, he is a poet who constantly explores what is beneath the scrim, the facade, the theatrical props, the smoke and mirrors we allow ourselves to be blinded by." ~Doug Holder, Publisher Ibbetson Street Press, author of Eating Grief at 3 AM. (Muddy River Books 2013) "This volume of poetry is brilliant. Meek stuns us with his honesty, so direct and so mature. Meek is as precise about things as he is about his feelings. His extraordinary talent and compassion shine through and permeate each line. This is indeed good news, news that can never be discounted." ~James Wm. Chichetto, The Dream of Norumbega, an Epic Poem on The United States of America Volumes I, II, III. Ed Meek, in this wondrously varied collection, explores the hard topics with a deft hand, perceptive eye, and generous insight. All with startling language. This is a collection worth reading and rereading. There is much, much here to discover, contemplate, and thoroughly savor. And I do. ~Phillip X Levine (Chronogram Magazine Poetry Editor)
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The Brave Maiden by Geoffrey Craig

The Brave Maiden by Geoffrey Craig

The Brave Maiden is the story of a young woman who – in a quest for revenge – prevails against greed, treachery and brutality in medieval England. She is destined to bring peace and justice to the country; but first, she must discover her inner strength and nurture the qualities required of a leader. About the author: Geoffrey Craig’s fiction, poetry and drama have appeared in numerous literary journals; and he has received two Pushcart Prize nominations. He retired from banking in 2002 and began his second career by writing poetry. One of his first poetic works was The Brave Maiden, an adventure novel in rhymed couplets that he originally wrote as a Christmas present for his then eleven-year-old daughter, Danielle. In addition to his fiction and poetry, four of Geoffrey’s full-length plays (one co-authored) and ten of his one-acts have been produced. He has directed productions of eight of his plays. He loves directing, in part because the theater is a cooperative endeavor and Geoffrey gets great satisfaction from working with people. In his first directorial opportunity, the cast all knew far more about theater than Geoffrey; but he persisted and learned. Prior to both banking and writing, Geoffrey served in the Peace Corps, a life changing experience that taught him much about the world in which we all live. As for Danielle, she is in law school.
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The Buddha Knot by Michael P. McManus

The Buddha Knot by Michael P. McManus

You will find the work within real, one perfect image/moment, image/moment until even the most dry-eyed among us will find themselves reading through pools of tears, and yet, not wanting to stop, hungry too, for the raw and real life that lives within these pages. ~Stellasue Lee, Ph. D., Author, Editor, Teacher The Buddha Knot begins in a climate of war and ends at peace, but not without taking us through a battleground of love, death, and “the slow erosion of all we cannot keep.” McManus’s amazing collection imparts soft wounds with its haunting language plucked from the eye of the storm. Be prepared to breathe in these words and to see more clearly. ~Lenore Weiss, author of The Golem Reading The Buddha Knot, I’m reminded again of where poetry should lead us: To Wisdom, that most painful of virtues. In stunning poems that read like an Apologia Pro Vita Sua, McManus looks back with a tender, elegiac eye at a life paved with loss and discovery, the lingering trauma of Vietnam, the death of a brother in childhood, and those enlightening moments of aloneness earned beneath the starred skies of Appalachia and the Louisiana Delta. You’ll read these courageous poems and reflect, and then read them again. ~Jack Heflin Author of The Map of Leaving: Poems, and Local Hope
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The Darkroom: Poems by Anna Cates

The Darkroom: Poems by Anna Cates

In this masterful collection of poetry, Dr. Anna Cates showcases her extraordinary prowess with open form and free verse. This collection represents the darker side of Cates’s voice, perhaps the reader’s most beloved side of any poet, with themes like poverty, insanity, crime, and war. This is a collection that belongs in any serious library of poetry today.
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The Hurricane by Deborah Guzzi

The Hurricane by Deborah Guzzi

This stunning collection of poems, written by international poet, Deborah Guzzi, speaks to timely and relevant societal issues, as well as the important icons of family, love, mercy, outrage, and things unsaid. Political themes resound, but never overpower her poems, which seem to unfold in layers, providing reading enjoyment for lovers of poetry regardless of age or experience. Guzzi’s book, The Hurricane, is a necessary addition to any serious collection of poetry today. Deborah Guzzi grew up in Connecticut, where she still lives and writes. When asked about why this book is so important, Deborah replied, “The plight of and rights of women in the 20th century have changed the course of the world. Hopefully, men and women will continue to grow in understanding of each other; my book was aimed at that goal.” Deborah Guzzi has found success elsewhere, being published in here/there, UK; Existere, Canada; Tincture, Australia; Cha Asian Literary Review, Hong Kong, China; Eunoia, Singapore; Latchkey Tales, New Zealand; Vine Leaves Literary Journal, Greece; mgv2>publishing, France; RedLeaf Poetry, India; as well as Travel by the Book, Ribbons, Bitterzoet, Dual Coast Magazine, Poetry Quarterly and others in the USA.
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The Sacred Monotony of Breath by Robert Nordstrom

The Sacred Monotony of Breath by Robert Nordstrom

This book recently won an Honorable Mention by the Council for Wisconsin Writers in their annual contest. This is a GREAT BOOK! Robert Nordstrom grew up in Ohio but found his true home in Wisconsin, where he has lived for the past 35 years. His fiction, essays and poetry have appeared in numerous state and national literary publications. A graduate of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee master’s program in creative writing, he served as editor for various scholarly and trade magazines, as well as a writing instructor at the university level, for over 30 years. His poetry has won several awards, including the Wisconsin Fellowship of Poets Triad contests and the Hal Grutzmacher Literary Contests. His poem “Old Lovers” won the 2014 Hal Prize and a residency stay at Write On. These days he stays busy writing poetry sandwiched by a stint as a school bus driver teaching kindergarteners how to snap their fingers and warning that it’s probably best they not lick the seat in front of them. Praise for The Sacred Monotony of Breath Just read “Waiting for the Kitchen Floor to Dry” and try to tell me Robert Nordstrom is not a powerful and sensitive witness. Nordstrom asks the big questions about love and death, old lovers and the celebration of living (“Recalling Happy”). Tell me there’s a better title than “Drinking Tea Downwind from Auschwitz” or a better first line than “my dog’s a liar and she’s not very good at it” (“Good Dog”). Read these poems. These are good poems. Bruce Dethlefsen, author of Small Talk and Unexpected Shiny Things, Wisconsin Poet Laureate (2011-2012) Robert Nordstrom's poems live richly in the space between memory, breath, and desire. Nostalgic, doubting, and doubling-back over the lost country of childhood and adolescence, he affectionately searches the past for clues that will illuminate the mysterious and haunting present. Alison Luterman, author of Desire Zoo and Feral City Robert Nordstrom writes with lyrically gritty understatement, compassion, and humor about the ordinary personal and its historical and political shadows: a dead mother “hair in curlers,/ nibbling an egg salad sandwich/ on the dark side of a screen door,” “a shoplifting orgy/ of squirt guns and yo-yos the morning after” a trip to the altar, returning from Vietnam to a shopping mall’s parking lot, a locker room in which “we’re all a bunch of cheerleaders and assassins/ with remotes,” a bus-load of school kids … already programmed with the high and low impulses of humans. “These children, these children, these children—/ why do I love them so? Because they open the windows / on the first warm day of winter,/ inhabit their stories before parody obscures.” Listen as Nordstrom allows his readers to inhabit their stories too. Wendy Vardaman, author of Obstructed View and founding co-editor of Cowfeather Press. She is one of Madison, Wisconsin's two Poets Laureate (2012-2015). 6" x 9" (15.24 x 22.86 cm) Black & White on White paper 120 pages ©2015 Robert Nordstrom Published by Prolific Press Inc. Harborton, VA (USA) ISBN-13: 978-1632750280 ISBN-10: 1632750287 BISAC: Poetry / General
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Torpedoes Away by Nicholas D'Angelo

Torpedoes Away by Nicholas D'Angelo

Torpedoes Away is a bombshell of micro poetry celebrating the art of haiku. Nicholas D’Angelo unloads these poems into the minds of his readers. Each creation is like a small epiphany bomb that explodes with meaning and resonance. Instead of chaos, these poems feel like they leave behind order, helping us to make sense of the world through the lens of the poet. If you love haiku, you will adore Torpedoes Away. About the Poet: Nicholas D'Angelo was born and raised in Newark, NJ. He received an M.F.A from Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, MI. He creates work in a variety of media, including graphic design, painting, mixed media, film and poetry. Currently, D'Angelo teaches Digital Design at East Stroudsburg University in Pennsylvania. He resides in West Orange, NJ.
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Waiting for the Light to Change by Scott Ruescher

Waiting for the Light to Change by Scott Ruescher

Waiting for the Light to Change is bursting with relevant poems for today’s lover of poetry. With themes that span politics, family, culture, and a myriad of today’s complexities, Ruescher engages the thoughtful reader, shares his poetical voice, and resonates beyond the pages. His long lines create a full-throated experience for the reader. By employing the language of poetry, Ruescher is able to open a dialog that seeks to engage, not divide, making this book suited to poetry lovers from all walks of life. Enjoy the world of Scott Ruescher. About the poet: Scott Ruescher won the 2016 Write Prize from Able Muse, the 2015 Rebecca Lard Award from Poetry Quarterly, and, in both 2013 and 2014, the Erika Mumford Award for poetry about travel and international culture from the New England Poetry Club. His chapbooks include Sidewalk Tectonics (documenting a road-trip from Lincoln’s birthplace in Hodgenville, Kentucky, to the site of ML King’s assassination in Memphis) and Perfect Memory (documenting more of that same trip as well as adventures in such places as Central Ohio, Central America, and Central Square, Cambridge). For 15 years he has been administrating the Arts in Education program at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and teaching part-time in the Boston University Prison Education Program—all while feeling vaguely skeptical about such intimate participation in institutions of higher learning. Praise for Scott Ruescher "Scott Ruescher goes back into the past like a man walking through walls and there finds the things that signify. The details, the atmospheres so full of our younger wanting. Had we but known. His long lines deliver the most bittersweet tones, playing the now against the then, and letting the implicit sadness of bygone lives throw a shadowy depth behind every new moment." Sven Birkerts, author of The Gutenberg Elegies: The Fate of Reading in an Electronic Age "Scott Ruescher is an evangelist for reality, declaiming its glitzy multitudinosity in long cinematic sentences, with a mixture of love, wonder and disgust. Ruescher's linguistic resourcefulness breaks like a storm across the page and we are borne along with recognition, amazement and dismay. Beneath their effervescent verbal surfaces these poems are sad and tender. Ruescher has a beautiful talent." Tony Hoagland, author of Unincorporated Personas in the Late Honda Dynasty; What Narcissism Means to Me; Donkey Gospel; and Sweet Ruin "Scott Ruescher is a Baby Boom Whitman, a Rust Belt Ginsberg, whose long sentences echo “Alice’s Restaurant” as much as those of his poetic forebears. The poems are filled with wry parenthetical asides and delicious specifics, casual rhymes and witty ending couplets. The southern and midwestern towns that trigger many of these poems are populated by “unknown, unheralded, unimportant citizens” but Ruescher always manages to celebrate “the old happiness/Of fellowship with humanity.” This includes fellowship with the “motel Patels,” disenfranchised black men on street corners or an old abuela on the same Guatemalan chicken bus, all the while conscious and open about his own status as a white American man. His willingness to be so up front about race is remarkable. Sometimes the poems seem as if they could be illustrated by Dorothea Lange and other times by paintings on black velvet, showing the range of Ruescher’s sharp eye and poignant observations. Whether he is revisiting a youthful paradise of silken-tasseled cornfields now paved into a 40-acre parking lot of ticking meters, making a pilgrimage to the Lorraine Motel or visiting Graceland and Lincoln’s birthplace on days they turn out to be closed, the poet is always trying make sense of the trajectory of his own life, from the working-class Republican heartland of his childhood to the academic east coast where he now lives. Along the way, he also helps us better make sense of a country inhabited by icons as different as Abe Lincoln, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Elvis." Jennifer Rose, author of The Old Direction of Heaven and Hometown for an Hour
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Counter Point by Laura Rodley

Counter Point by Laura Rodley

Laura Rodley brings us the poems of the Whydah, a pirate ship that serves as the backdrop for an epic story of love, loss, fortune and frailty. One desperate leap changes the life of a young woman coming of age in a man’s world, aboard a ship where her very presence means bad luck — fate has other plans. Praise for Laura Rodley: "Laura Rodley is known for her narrative finesse, and in Counter Point she masterfully weaves poetry with prose in a remarkable tale of lovers coming together on, of all places, a pirate ship. Be sure to set aside enough time to read the whole thing in one sitting - you'll not be able to put it down until you reach the end!" Robin Stratton, editor Boston Literary Magazine "Laura Rodley's remarkable poems transport you to the North Atlantic in the early 1700s. Novelistic in scope, Counter Point uses scene, dialogue, and action-driven narrative. And like any good novel, this book introduces an unforgettable character, Marie, an ordinary girl ("A laundress wears no jewelry on her / hands, only the roses of chapped skin.") who navigates the world with extraordinary fortitude. Artful language and sensual detail--whether evoking love's first desires ("and here we splice open our shirts / like oysters after plucking / and just as lush.") or describing the malodors of a pirate ship ("even the smell of their feet / had a noise called squelching.")--bring to life a briny world, both intimate and writ large. It's not often a poetry book is described as a page-turner, but Counter Point is that book: a heroine's adventure lyrically told." Ellen Wade Beals, Publisher, Editor of Solace in So Many Words "There is something of the tides as they ebb and flow in the poetry of Laura Rodley. There is something of the sea in all of her power and mystery as she brings to life characters from another time and place. There is the grip of the human heart and spirit in every line. There is so much truth and terrible beauty in every poem. And woven throughout is this amazing story of adventure, tragedy, love and triumph. Counter Point is simply brilliant." Tommy Clark, retired Northampton Fire Chief and 2016 Chair of 30 Poems in 30 Days, a fundraiser in support of literary at Center for New Americans
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