"November," as with each of the diary-entry poems from Martín Veiga’s "Diary of Crosses Green," is indeed "news that stays news." Limited as we have been for over a year to walks of several miles from our front door, there is no better sequence of poems that confirm the curative, the meditative, even the emboldening act of simply paying attention: "What the city’s people insist on letting go, the river shows: a relentless spirit." Keith Payne on "November" |
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"Brian Tierney Wins the Fifth Annual Jake Adam York Prize" “In these poems of turnpikes, water, and migraine light, filled with grief and life, the poet tells us it’s all right that ‘we don’t love / living.’ Here, precision is a form of metaphor, language a facet of experience; the poet writes with a kind of allusive purity and vulnerability—‘each thought a texture’—that I find moving. Rise and Float is that rare thing, a book of one striking poem after another." via MILKWEED |
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| Poetry Daily stands with the Black community. We oppose racism, oppression, and police brutality. We will continue to amplify diverse voices in the poetry world. Black Lives Matter. |
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What Sparks Poetry: Tracy K. Smith on "Black Hair" "Working on the poem, I saw clearly how the recurring image of black hair signifies within the specific context of Asian femininity, and yet in my hands—in my mouth—the phrase 'black hair' began to make space for a second set of values and vulnerabilities as informed by my racially specific experience." |
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