Paul Portugés is one of the best writers I have ever had the pleasure to work with, and his Rache...
Diana M. Raab's Dear Anaïs: My Life in Poems for You is not only a tribute to the late diarist, b...
A cycle of poems spoken in the voice of a commiunity of swimmers and environmentalists who gather...
A twenty-first century trickster, Ken Jones, in 'Unutterable Blunders and Palace Disasters,' make...
In Human Bridges, Katherine De Lorraine¿s valuable and strongly achieved ambitions are healing an...
In Spring Hunger, Keith Liles 'arms his thirst' with the outrages of our era and writes a searing...
Wendy Brown-Báez writes in the heat from ecstatic love, loss, Mexico, and New Mexico. She has the...
With a bow to recent masters like Justice, Wright, and even Nemerov, John Morris¿s poems explore ...
Whether her poems remain close to home among her loved ones, venture out into the urban streetsca...
Malcolm Cowley called childhood the 'landscape by which all others are reckoned and condemned.' T...
In her sixth full-length collection, Martha Deborah Hall explores the shifting lights and shadows...
'It's my job to remember things I never saw,' Karen Douglass says in one poem, and she does - rem...