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  • av Susan Yanos
    218,-

  • av Lin Marshall Brummels
    175,-

    Lin Marshall Brummels mines family-of-origin stories in "Cottonwood Strong, Bent but Not Broken," to separate her understanding of past events from the sanitized version presented by her family. Her poems chronical growing up with cousins, fending off a brother, and believing she understands evil. However, she still falls for men who hurt her. Birth of her children, their adventures and transitions to adulthood, finally usher in some wisdom. From the vantage point of age, she seeks peace, while at the same time half-fearing she needs to blow up the process and start over.

  • av Rebekah Bloyd
    175,-

  • av Brian Burmeister
    175,-

    The poems of The Things We Did, All the Things that We Do are based on and inspired by news articles and documentary materials detailing war and genocide on the African continent.

  • av Margaret A. Fox
    175,-

  • av Kristina L. Tregnan
    175,-

  • av Laurie Elizabeth Lambert
    218,-

    Laurie Lambert's first full length book of poetry is a deeply personal collection of memories and stories. In "What We Are Made Of" this poet describes in intimate detail the moments of quiet joy, deep love, and heartfelt grief that make up a life. Lambert's poems reveal a genuine connection to nature, and describe unique aspects of her relationships to trees, birds, and her river. These friendships, as well as her ardent bonds with family, enrich her writings with a private, earnest spirituality that brings the reader in close. Speaking in both whispers and shouts, she shares her struggles with life's challenges and her relationships to beloved companions. Lambert reveals the secrets of her life, inking her heart onto the page.

  • av Kristina Nichole Brodbeck
    218,-

  • av Judith Janoo
    177,-

  • av Linda Elkin
    229

  • av Jane Ebihara
    175,-

  • av Noah Renn
    168,-

  • av Elizabeth Levine
    175,-

  • av Corey D. Cook
    168,-

  • av Bill Meissner
    229

    In "The Mapmaker and His Woman," the mapmaker narrator travels, in a few short hours, to Budapest, Salamanca, Punta Cana and Dusseldorf, but always returns home to the woman he loves. In another poem, Harry Houdini's critics attempt to suppress his opinions and negate his magical powers. In "The Groundskeeper's Teenage Daughters," young girls speak out against their domineering, controlling father. A prize-winning poem features the haunting voice of the ghost of Marilyn Monroe, who talks about her image appearing in her favorite mirror and how it effects the men who see it. The poems take you to variety of unique places: to a small Mexican village in the Yucatan, to the treacherous Gulf waters between Cuba and Florida, to a traveling carnival, to Bob Dylan's north country back roads, to outer space, a million miles from earth, then back to the isolated county roads in the rural heartland. Many poems focus on personal experiences, including childhood incidents and relationships with mothers, fathers and lovers. One section of the book, entitled "Borders: In Some Other Country," throws a spotlight on political and social issues, with wry and poignant poems about the repression of free speech, the use of nuclear weapons, gender roles, and the prevalence of gun violence. Another section in the collection features characterizations of famous American icons such as Albert Einstein, Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, James Dean, and the 19th century classic poet, Walt Whitman. These poems reverberate beyond the celebrities to make unique comments about American life and culture. Sometimes comic, sometimes poignant, the poems in The Mapmaker's Dream take you on journeys to places you never expected to go, and to characters you never dreamed you'd meet.

  • av Han-Jae Lee
    227,-

  • av Kasey Perkins
    175,-

  • av Fran Baird
    175,-

  • av Daniel Ruefman
    229

  • av Paul Stroble
    175,-

  • av Sonja de Vries
    175,-

  • av Savannah Slone
    175,-

    Hearing the Underwater is a poetry collection that explores reproductive rights, mental illness, motherhood, poverty, and sexuality through a feminist lens. These poems weave quick flashes of imagery and sound through a raw expedition toward self-love. This collection is, ultimately, about survival and acquainting oneself with autonomy.

  • av Mark Madigan
    175,-

  • av Colleen Kearney Rich
    175,-

  • av Isabella J. Mansfield
    175 - 335,-

  • av Melissa Reeser Poulin
    175,-

  • av Marcia Blacker
    175,-

  • av Jill Mceldowney
    175,-

  • av Daniel Pereyra
    218,-

  • av Gardner McFall
    175,-

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