My father weighed a little less than at birth.
I carried him in both hands to the pines
as October brought the burning season. 
When I unscrewed the urn, bone-chaff and grit
streamed out. The smell of gunpowder. 
I remembered the sulphur hiss of the match —
how he taught me to breathe on the steeple of logs
until the kindling caught and flames quickened.

That night, in sleep, I saw the forest clearing
by the moor’s edge, and the ring of his ashes. 
A skirl of smoke began to rise —
bracken curling, a fume of blaeberry leaves. 
Ants broke their ranks, scattering, fleeing, 
and a moth spun ahead of the fire-wind. 
I took the path over the heath at a run. 

A voice at my shoulder said, 'You’ll inherit fire.'
And through the smoke I glimpsed a line of figures 
on the hillside, beating and beating the heather 
as the fire-front roared towards them. 
A volley of shouts: 'Keep the wind at your back!'
My grandmother threshing with a fire-broom, 
Dad hacking a firebreak. My stillborn brother, now grown, 
sprinting for the hollow where the spring once flowed, 
the whole hill flaring in the updraft. 

And there: a girl, running for the riverside —
she wore my face, the shade of ash.
from the book BURNING SEASON /  Bloodaxe Books
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"Muirburn" received the Poetry Society’s Peggy Poole Award and was commended in the 2018 National Poetry Competition.

Yvonne Reddick on "Muirburn"
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Picture of a young Louise Gluck
Remembering Louise Glück

"Working with young minds quickly became a sort of nourishment. 'She was profoundly interested in people,' says Anita Sokolsky, a friend and colleague from Williams College, where Glück began teaching in 1984. 'She had a vivid and unstinting interest in others’ lives that teaching helped focus for her. Teaching was very generative to her writing, but it was also a kind of counter to the intensity and isolation of her writing.'"

via THE NEW YORK TIMES
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What Sparks Poetry:
Oliver de la Paz on Language as Form


"I started writing pantoums to demarcate section breaks to rectify what I saw as an imbalance in the work. I wanted to place the pantoum, which was originally a Malaysian form, against the sonnet's Western European tradition as a subtle nod to the complications that arise when attempting to adapt to a place."
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