book reviews
Reviews of the best poetry books, collections and anthologies; discover poems and up-and-coming poets across all cultures, genres and themes.
Nilsen's 'Without A Kiss' Is Not Without a Warning
While Phoebe Nilsen's chapbook is at first unassuming in its slender arrangement, its warning to the readers who trace their fingers down its white pages is great. Published in 2018 by Finishing Line Press, Without a Kiss explores the deep consequences of a missed romantic opportunity along with the bittersweet nostalgia and tortuousness regret that comes with confronting it. Even the cover (designed by Elizabeth Maines McCleavy) of this well crafted collection, in all its black and white glory, works to push readers back into their own past mistakes whether those took place yesterday or years ago for some.
Laura DiNovis BerryPublished 5 years ago in PoetsBook Report: 'The White Goddess'
This is part three of my review series on The White Goddess. You can find part one hereand you can find part two here. Here’s a problem that I run into when reading The White Goddess, and I suspect it’s a problem other people run into also. Robert Graves is really speaking a language that has become ingrained for him through his thinking and his reading, but that doesn’t necessarily translate automatically to a general audience. Am I wrong about this?
Dunn's Poetic Work Intoxicates
Readers be warned: To read Mark D. Dunn's 2014 poetic collection Even the Weapons is to feel the headiness of imbibing too much wine. His work is at once grounded in a thick snow fall and yet still, these poems are lifted off into more cerebral, cosmic planes. The poetry within this well crafted collection fluctuates between the realms of daydream and every day without bothering with any of reality's stringent tethers. In all honesty, the second movement is what can be best described as a stream of consciousness; readers will lose themselves in a twirling dream state where the poetic lines become touch points of thought, of connection, of some kind of reality rather than simple pretty words in boxed up stanzas.
Laura DiNovis BerryPublished 5 years ago in PoetsBook Report: 'The White Goddess'
If you haven’t read part one of my series analyzing this great masterpiece, here is a link to the first chapter. This chapter takes the literary analysis further into the substance and content of folklore, continuing on the themes introduced in the first chapter.
Book Report: 'The White Goddess'
I’ve read The White Goddess so many times the lines evoke memories and emotions to me like bible verses or Princess Bride quotes. Over the years I’ve tried to get dozens of friends and lovers to read this thing so I will have someone to talk to about it, but apparently the wordy obscurity of it is a bit too much for most people. Personally, the prose is dense in a mesmerizing way, like a holy text somehow engineered to plug into my individual neurological DNA. I would blindly offer my hand in marriage to anyone who reads this thing and forms some interesting opinions about it, but so far no takers.
Vivisection of a Woman
Christine E. Ray's first full poetry collection Composition of a Woman, published in 2018 by Sudden Denouement Publishing, is a fine addition to the universe of feminist poetry. It also must be said that Ray's cover, designed by Mitch Green, is seducing with its outlines of supple flesh upon the deep, matte black canvas, the brilliant white of a solid female skeleton, which is topped by a vibrant, genteel flower. This makes the interior work, which reads as if a vivisection has been performed upon the speaker, all the more shocking to the reader beholding it. While the bones of this collection are indeed hardy, they are not all quite as elegant as the body depicted on the cover.
Laura DiNovis BerryPublished 5 years ago in PoetsTransmutation into Paper
Jayne Marek's 2018 poetry collection, The Tree Surgeon Dreams of Bowling, is a long exhale of breath broken into three specific movements. These movements showcase very distinct emotional territories as well as perform the transformation of a flesh and blood woman into ink. The opening of the book is filled with a cold bitterness. This is a marked change from what follows in later pages. Readers are then met with the serenity and calm which is wafted into the air by the flicking pages found in the middle of the collection. At last, in the final selection, Marek offers up a sense of subdued bereavement to her readers. Together, these factions form a whole work which is a hushed whisper; impressive lines seem to speak a little louder, assuring themselves places in the reader's memories, and an escape from loneliness on the page.
Laura DiNovis BerryPublished 5 years ago in PoetsFollow The Flaming Cross
The moon is a looming quarter as all of Glendale sit on their back porches, gazing across the valley boarder. Singing hails to god Camulus, keeping vigilant order
H.L. DowlessPublished 5 years ago in PoetsA Pleasing Study in Pain
White hot searing pain exploding through every cell, shrieks echoing in each and every molecule throughout a body in utter havoc—that's the intense sensation the cover (artfully designed by Chris Arabadjis) of Willa Carroll's 2018 poetry book,Nerve Chorus, thrusts upon the beholder. Carroll's collection of poems zeros in on the unadulterated pain of simply existing. The pieces within this work each explore and subsequently flush out the wide array of physical agonies which make themselves available to human beings struggling to survive in this realm as well as the emotional traumas humans so often face. She doesn't shirk from tenuous situations. She instead tackles these painful emotional occurrences by chronicling the suicide of an uncle and the decay of a parent. The work as a whole is a deliberate translation of pain, a truly wonderful subject to investigate, even to wallow in. For as Carroll states in "EmergencyRoom," "Pain is perfect. Total. One-pointed. No maybes."
Laura DiNovis BerryPublished 5 years ago in PoetsFive Poetry Books You Can't Miss
Poetry is an art. There’s no limit to the number of stories that can be told and feelings that can be conveyed in verse. I’m personally a big fan of our Instapoets, including Rupi Kaur and Amanda Lovelace, but I’d like to share several books that fans of these massively popular modern poets will also enjoy. This list contains a mix of old and new books of poetry about love and musings on life in general.
Leigh FisherPublished 5 years ago in PoetsLaForge Instills New Life into Ancient Myth
Published by Ravenna Press in 2017, the poet and prose author Jane Rosenberg LaForge's work Daphne And Her Discontents weaves a complicated, personal family history and ancient Greek myth into a complete, original poetry collection. The intertwining of personal stories with a piece of history shared by the world allows these poems to travel into the past, throughout present and well into the future. This strategy elevates LaForge's collection to a new plane. It also effectively destabilizes readers as LaForge has done quite well in creating an atmosphere which feels as though "...we move as though space and sea inverted..."
Laura DiNovis BerryPublished 6 years ago in PoetsAnalysis of 'The Lady's Dressing Room'
Swift had written many parodies regarding ideas and thoughts that were presented in the 18th century. In “The Lady’s Dressing Room,” Swift shows a whole other side of femininity, the more hidden and disgusting side and the poem demonstrates how the man’s reaction changes towards the woman once he goes snooping in the lady’s dressing room. The entirety of the poem is meant to come off as a satire for both men and women. For women it is to stop trying to reach men’s unrealistic expectations, by taking hours in the dressing room trying to look like a goddess and for men the satire is meant to make men not invade a woman’s private space because one might find things that they were not supposed to and it might trigger some emotions that turn a man into someone who sees ugliness and not beauty. examples are all meant for satire that women try to match up to men’s unrealistic expectations by going through all the trouble, to impress a man. In “The Lady’s Dressing Room,” we can see the humorous side of the 18th century; Jonathan Swift has a unique way of expressing problems of the 18th century through using a sense of humor and even more so, wit.