The family connections in Cynthia Atkins' IN THE EVENT OF FULL DISCLOSURE are intimate, both entwining and empowering the rich experience these poems convey. "I've faked it and faked it well./ I hear our ancestors yelling / from the mental ward of hell," declares Cynthia Atkins near the start of IN THE EVENT OF FULL DISCLOSURE, a book that explores what it means when mental illness becomes close as blood. Family offers both comfort and disquiet. In these elegant, beautifully observed poems, Atkins considers the burden of being a daughter, a sibling, a mother, and-most of all-a poet charged with making sense of 'indecipherable lists, ' of wars domestic and national, and of the fact that all of us are 'born in a trick of love.'"-Jehanne Dubrow "I like the easy and big-hearted familiarity with the reader that Cynthia Atkins shows in her poetry. She doesn't keep us at arm's length. She invites us right in, an act that lends confidence and helps to break down the barriers between writer and reader. At those moments when the 'small feet / of silence conspire / in your ear' and 'the gibbous moon rises / like an old rubbed coin, ' we feel we are right there with her. What a pleasure it is to be in the presence of poetry that is so readable and companionable "-Richard Tillinghast "Rhapsodic, generous, and seriously witty, this poetry invites us to discover new routes through our dizzying contemporary situation. So much of wide-ranging experience is drawn into this startling poetry-and with such energy. Cynthia Atkins's speakers refuse to let their word-loving heads be pushed underwater by despair. They rise up, their propulsive language bringing to the surface the troubling signs of our time, all the while defying the risks we face, coining phrases (a character acts 'like a freak teapot'), and delivering us at last to intimations about 'the room beyond / the room of knowledge.'"-Lee Upton "Cynthia Atkins' extraordinary collection is a display of precious, vacuum-packed, uranium-heavy poems that still glow in the dark a long time after you have finished reading them, illuminating your heart and guts from the inside."--Seb Doubinsky
The poems in this collection by Lucy Maud Montgomery were written to reach the readers she thought of as "kindred spirits" - those thousands of people who then, as now, would be as deeply moved as she was by beauty in nature and in spirit.
... lines that, like so many magicians, conjure a rabbit there for her pleasure Spark-charged Jim, he'd throw off nine new ideas a minute; most were wildly impractical or even silly but some, some were ingenious; he could shower sparks ...
An anthology of short stories and poems by Edgar Allan Poe including "The Murders in the Rue Morgue," "The Purloined Letter," "Annabel Lee," and "The Raven."
Edgar Allan Poe: Short Stories, Poems, Novels
Presents a collection of tales from Edgar Allan Poe in an illustrated format by prominent artists working in the fields of comics, book illustration, and fine arts.
So today I board the later , slower Matthew J. Hughes to do just that , fetch the burgeoning language . At the moment , the sun at stern , David's latest postcard , a Tapies collage sent from Barcelona marking the page I was reading ...
Laura Ingalls Wilder shares her vision of the fanciful, ethereal, and mischievous world of the "Little People" in this first-ever collection of fairy poems she wrote in 1915.
And not the least of this book's disconcerting, but strangely salutary, powers is that, under its stimulus, you can't help starting back.
Selected Poems: in Five Sets
This book also makes available a full index of poem titles to assist scholars, students, and critics in finding and contextualizing Gilman's poetry.