Todd Dillard’s Ragnarok at the Father-Daughter Dance, published by VariantLit, is truly a gift from the literary and […]
Reviews
In the year 1500, Guru Nanak Dev Ji stood before his aging parents to explain he could no […]
Gus Jarvis on Preeti Kaur Rajpal’s Membery
Preeti Kaur Rajpal’s membery opens with a manglacharan–an invocation: “first guard at the gate / majuscule to adorn […]
KB Kinkel on Membery by Preeti Kaur Rajpal
How does one survive the pain and challenges of one’s grandparents’ lives? It is often thought that it […]
Leslie Friedman on Membery by Preeti Kaur Rajpal
I received Ruth Danon’s Turn up the Heat: New Poems almost a year ago. When reading a book […]
Leonard Temme on Ruth Danon’s Turn Up the Heat
I read some poems of Kurt Schwitters in my green, all-embracing years, and even in those days found […]
Robert Dunsdon on Ruth Danon’s Turn Up the Heat
Formally collaborative projects remain relatively uncommon in contemporary poetry, despite its many other radical delights. It has been […]
KB Kinkel on Therapon by Bruce Bond & Dan Beachy-Quick
In Vetero Fertilization (IVF) is a notoriously difficult process to conceive a person. Despite the more recent, yet, […]
Naya Clark on the Poetry of Toby Goostree
The telling phrase, casually employed, is a fair indication of a poet’s worth, so when leafing through Habitats […]
Robert Dunsdon on Habitats by Katharine Whitcomb
In Kingdom of Glass and Seed, Jules Jacob initiates a fascinating and tender dialogue between nature and family. […]
Zainab Omaki on Kingdom of Glass and Seed by Jules ...
The World as It Is: A Review of Aquamarine by Valerie Duff The opening poem “Music of the […]
Aline Soules on Aquamarine by Valerie Duff
Freedom and forgiveness are often closely intertwined. While these emotional processes can exist independently of one another, carving […]