Writing a review some months after a critically acclaimed book has been released can be a challenge. Generally, all the good words have been taken, and you have to claw through the ground looking for an unused noun, surreptitiously create a new adjective out of dried grass, an errant dandelion puff, and some spit.
Read MoreLeila Chatti’s debut collection of poems is mesmerizing for its narrative flow, illuminating language, stark imagery and altogether powerful voice.
Read MoreIn The Lateness of the World, Carolyn Forché’s much-anticipated new poetry collection—her first in a decade and a half—offers a subtle, seamless, and altogether stunning interplay between the poetic, the personal, and the politic. Forché’s “poetry of witness” lights the reader’s path through brilliant complexities of meaning, often in lean phrases that astonish with their power and demand repeated close readings via multiple lenses.
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