"This work is unlike any other, in its range of rich, conjuring imagery and its dexterity, its smart voice. Carroll-Hackett doesn’t spare us—but doesn’t save us—she draws a blueprint of power and class with her unflinching pivot: matter-of-fact and tender." —Jan Beatty

Archive for the ‘Must Read Monday’ Category

Monday Must Read: Jeannine Hall Gailey, The Robot Scientist’s Daughter

 

Monday Must Read!

JeannineInternetHeadshotThis week meet Jeannine Hall Gailey She is the author of four books of poetry: Becoming the Villainess,She Returns to the Floating WorldUnexplained Fevers, and The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, new in 2015 from Mayapple Press. Her work has been featured on NPR’s The Writer’s Almanac, Verse Daily, and in The Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror. Her poems have appeared in The American Poetry ReviewThe Iowa Review and Prairie Schooner. Jeannine recently served as the second Poet Laureate of Redmond, Washington.

Visit Jeannine’s web site: www.webbish6.com

Follow Jeannine on Twitter! @webbish6

Find Jeannine’s beautiful books!

The Robot Scientist’s Daughter:

http://mayapplepress.com/the-robot-scientists-daughter-jeannine-hall-gailey/

Dazzling in its descriptions of a natural world imperiled by the hidden dangers of our nuclear past, this book presents a girl in search of the secrets of survival. In The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, Jeannine Hall Gailey creates for us a world of radioactive wasps, cesium in the sunflowers, and robotic daughters. She conjures the intricate menace of the nuclear family and nuclear history, juxtaposing surreal cyborgs, mad scientists from fifties horror flicks and languid scenes of rural childhood. Mining her experience growing up in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, the writer allows the stories of the creation of the first atomic bomb, the unintended consequences of scientific discovery, and building nests for birds in the crooks of maple trees to weave together a reality at once terrifying and beautiful.The Robot Scientist’s Daughter reveals the underside of the Manhattan Project from a personal angle, and charts a woman’s – and America’s – journey towards reinvention.”

Becoming the Villainess:

http://www.steeltoebooks.com/books/3-books/books/44-becoming-the-villainess

Unexplained Fevers:

http://webbish6.com/books/unexplained-fevers/

She Returns to the Floating World:

http://webbish6.com/books/she-returns-to-the-floating-world/

 

Praise for Jeannine Hall Gailey’s work:

In The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, Jeannine Hall Gailey charts the dangerous secrets in a nuclear family as well as a nuclear research facility. Her ecofeminist approach to the making of bombs, celebrates our fragile natural world. Full of flowers and computers, this riveting poetry captures the undeniable compromises and complexities of our times.Denise Duhamel

What is her story? “In this story,” Jeannine Gailey tells us, “a girl grows up in a field of nuclear reactors. She gives us lessons in poison. And as we watch this heroine appear from various angles, in multiple lights we realize that just like this girl who “made birds’ nests / with mud and twigs, hoping that birds would / come live in them.” Gailey makes an archetype for a contemporary American woman whom she sees as beautiful — and damaged — and proud — and unafraid. And the Scientist? He “lives alone in a house made of snow. / If he makes music, no one hears it.” America? It builds barbed wire “to keep enemies out of its dream” – but we all are surrounded by these barbed wires of a country whose “towns melt into sunsets, into dust clouds, into faces.” In subtle, playful, courageous poems, we are witnessing a brilliant performance.Ilya Kaminsky

More from Jeannine online!

Rattle: http://www.rattle.com/poetry/elemental-by-jeannine-hall-gailey

2River: http://www.2river.org/2RView/10_4/poems/gailey.html

Atticus Review: http://atticusreview.org/featuring-jeannine-hall-gailey/

Verse Daily! http://www.versedaily.org/2015/aboutjeanninehallgailey.shtml

Interview:

http://jackstraw.org/blog/?p=578

Hear Jeannine Read:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OZ0mCEbCQ-M

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu5j7BjnorU

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CxwncJ7KACg

 

Happy Reading!

xo

Mary

 

Monday Must Read! Pam Uschuk, Crazy Love and Blood Flower

 

Monday Must Read! Pam Uschuk

pam publicity photoThis week meet Pam Uschuk. Political activist and wilderness advocate, Pam Uschuk has howled out six books of poems, including Crazy Love, winner of a 2010 American Book Award, and Wild In The Plaza Of Memory. A new collection of poems, Blood Flower, was released in February 2015.

Translated into more than dozen languages, Pam’s work appears in over three hundred journals and anthologies worldwide, including Poetry, Ploughshares, Agni Review, etc. Uschuk has been awarded the 2011 War Poetry Prize from WINNING WRITERS, 2010 New Millenium Poetry Prize, 2010 Best of the Web, the Struga International Poetry Prize (for a theme poem), the Dorothy Daniels Writing Award from the National League of American PEN Women, the King’s English Poetry Prize and prizes from Ascent, Iris, and Amnesty International.

Editor-In-Chief of Cutthroat, A Journal Of The Arts, Uschuk lives in Bayfield, Colorado. Uschuk is often a featured writer at the Prague Summer Programs, teaches occasional workshops for the University of Arizona’s Poetry Center, and was the 2011 John C. Hodges Visiting Writer at University of Tennessee, Knoxville. She’s working on a multi-genre book called The Book of Healers Healing: An Odyssey Through Ovarian Cancer.

Buy Pam’s Beautiful Books!

Blood Flower: http://wingspress.com/book.cfm?book_ID=193

Crazy Love: http://www.wingspress.com/book.cfm?book_ID=104

Wild in the Plaza of Memory: http://www.wingspress.com/book.cfm?book_ID=141

More of Pam’s books here!

http://www.wingspress.com/author.cfm?author_ID=24

Read More from Pam online:

http://www.coloradopoetscenter.org/poets/uschuk_pamela/

http://www.thedrunkenboat.com/uschuk.html

http://www.terrain.org/poetry/24/uschuk.htm

Hear Pam Read: https://vimeo.com/74141138

Praise for Pam’s Work!

Like Lorca, Uschuk is a poet of the duende, that mystical Spanish conception; she views the poem as a vehicle for fierce engagement with the body and its social realities, often with a metaphysical awareness that transcends and extends the corporeal into the natural world. Working a poetics rare for a North American writer, Uschuk has crafted a poetry equally steeped in nature and political resistance. This is an ecological poetics of engagement, a mythic poetry—part Lorca, part Rachel Carson.”–Sean Thomas Dougherty, RAIN TAXI, 2012

American Book Award–winner Uschuk’s new collection of meditative, delectably powerful poems offers a steady and generous solace that serves as a platform for thought-provoking glimpses into spirit, family, and feeling. She has written of a tethered reality, commonplace secrets, and emotional rescue. And she is political. Among the more than 40 poems, “Red Menace” (“After all of these years / it’s clear what it was / those teachers couldn’t name— / not just the consonants but the roots, / the skin drums”) and “Black Swan” (“Grandfather, what purpose can you discern / now your entitled eyes are soil, / your heart going to anthracite?”) are standouts. In the same vein as her contemporaries Patricia Smith and Joy Harjo, Uschuk is strong in metaphor, urgent in language, and powerful in vivisection.” — Mark Eleveld

Monday Must Read! M. Mack: Traveling and Imaginary Kansas

 

Monday Must Read! 

Mack and MilquetoastThis week meet M. Mack. M. Mack is a genderqueer poet, editor, and fiber artist in Virginia. Mack is also the author of Theater of Parts (Sundress Publications, 2016) and the chapbook Imaginary Kansas (dancing girl press, 2015). Ze holds an M.F.A. from George Mason University and is former managing editor of So to Speak: a feminist journal of language and art. Hir work has appeared recently in Fencecream city reviewHot Metal Bridge, and The Queer South (Sibling Rivalry Press, 2014). Mack is a founding co-editor of Gazing Grain Press and an assistant editor for Cider Press Review.

Traveling is a collection of hybrid prose sequences that have some elements of dramatic forms. They investigate gender across multiple dimensions real and otherwise. Traveling is, in part, a reference to traveling dreams and astral travel. The chapbook was selected with four others in Hyacinth Girl‘s 2014 open reading period, which was run as Chapbook Thunderdome. Traveling was edited by Tess Wilson for HGP and designed by Sarah Reck. The cover art is by Tristin Miller (who has a facebook page here).

Order Traveling!

http://hyacinthgirlpress.com/yearfive/traveling.html

M. Mack’s website:

http://mxmack.com/

Links to published sequences from the chapbook and a video of one of the poems:

http://wickedalicezine.tumblr.com/post/50908249325/not-this-by-m-mack

http://www.menacinghedge.com/fall2014/entry-mack.php

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u3A3EyZX-4g

Here is an interview:

http://femmesfollesnebraska.tumblr.com/post/104084653092/nicole-tong-interviews-poet-editor-and-fiber

Some bits of Imaginary Kansas, a chapbook forthcoming later this summer from dancing girl press.

http://melancholyhyperbole.com/tag/m-mack/

http://www.temenosjournal.com/poetry/Mack_Kansas.html

 

Happy reading!

xo

Mary

Monday Must Read! Sam Rasnake: Cinéma Vérité

Monday Must Read! Sam Rasnake: Cinéma Vérité

sam rasnakeThis week meet Sam Rasnake. Sam’s works, receiving five nominations for the Pushcart Prize, have appeared in OCHO, Wigleaf, Big Muddy,Literal Latté, Poem, Pebble Lake Review, Poets/Artists, New World Writing, Dead Mule School of Southern Literature, Santa Fe Literary ReviewThrush Poetry Journal, as well as the anthologies MiPOesias Companion 2012, The Southern Poetry Anthology, Best of the Web 2009, LUMMOX 2012, Flash Fiction Fridays, BOXCAR Poetry Review Anthology 2, Deep River Apartments, The Lost Children, and Dogzplot Flash Fiction 2011.

He is the author of Necessary Motions (Sow’s Ear Press, 1998), Religions of the Blood (Pudding House Press, 1998), Lessons in Morphology (GOSS183, 2010) and Inside a Broken Clock (Finishing Line Press, 2010). His latest poetry collection is Cinéma Vérité (A-Minor Press 2013). His latest poetry collection is Cinéma Vérité (A-Minor Press 2013).

He is chapbook editor for Sow’s Ear Poetry Review and has served as a judge for the Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Prize, University of California, Berkeley, and from 2001-2010 was editor of Blue Fifth Review. Since 2011, Rasnake has edited, with Michelle Elvy, the Blue Five Notebook Series from BFR.

Sam’s website: https://samofthetenthousandthings.wordpress.com/

Get Sam’s beautiful books!

Cinéma Vérité

(from fabulous A-Minor Press!):  https://www.createspace.com/4377102

Inside a Broken Clock: 

`https://finishinglinepress.com/product_info.php?products_id=660

 

Read more of Sam’s work online:

http://www.connotationpress.com/poetry/1129-sam-rasnake-poetry

http://www.fwrictionreview.com/post/28048617961/three-poems-by-sam-rasnake

http://www.coriummagazine.com/?page_id=179

http://tuesdaypoem.blogspot.com/2013/06/some-last-things-by-sam-rasnake-so-many.html

 

Hear Sam Read his beautiful work:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FSOx7D62-NA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GrBm91nmX6s

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MjoGRro_1VQ

 

Happy reading!

xo

Mary

Monday Must Read! Laurie Kolp: Upon the Blue Couch

Monday Must Read!

laurie kolpThis week meet Laurie Kolp. Laurie is an avid runner, lover of nature, mother of three, and wife to former Marine who enjoys living life one day at a time in Southeast Texas. She is the author of Upon the Blue Couch (Winter Goose Publishing, 2014) and Hello It’s Your Mother (Finishing Line Press, October 2015). Laurie’s poems have appeared in more than four dozen print and online journals worldwide including the 2015 Poet’s Market, Scissors & Spackle, North Dakota Quarterly, Blue Fifth Review, and Pirene’s Fountain.

You can find out more about Laurie on her website, http://lauriekolp.com

Praise for Laurie’s work!

Laurie Kolp’s new collection Hello, It’s Your Mother is a poetry that threads the hard truth of loss and grief to daily living – piano lessons, coffee tables, blueberry scones, and phones.  It’s the ordinary made universal in the relentless will to sort the fragments of life, to give us something to hold, and Kolp does this well. Her writing skill never falters, never loses voice, allowing the real moments of mother / daughter relationships to find a strong connection in all readers. This is a remarkable and penetrating work.~Sam Rasnake, author of Cinéma Vérité (Editor of Blue Fifth Review)

***

Because Kolp writes of the everyday, she writes of the familiar. These poems and the life they paint are recognizable. We see ourselves in the poems; we share the emotions they evoke; and the life and lives they represent become our lives. ~Glynn Young of Tweetspeak Poetry, Author of Poetry at Work

Laurie’s Work and More Online:

Upon the Blue Couch- Amazon, Barnes & Noble

Origami Poems Project (free micro-chap)- What You Left

Turtle Island Quarterly- Muffled (bottom of Chapter 1)

Gnarled Oak- haiku

Otter Magazine- Crushed Rose

Black Heart Magazine- 3 poems

Here is a link to an interview by Robert Lee Brewer on Poetic Asides.

 

Happy Reading!

xo

Mary

Monday Must Read! Marilyn McCabe: Perpetual Motion and Rugged Means of Grace

Monday Must Read! 

marilyn mccabeThis week, meet Marilyn McCabe, author of Perpetual Motion, published by The Word Works in 2012 as the winner of the Hilary Tham Capitol Collection contest.

Peek inside and purchase Marilyn’s book from Small Press Distribution:

http://www.spdbooks.org/Producte/9780915380824/perpetual-motion.aspx

A chapbook, Rugged Means of Grace, was published by Finishing Line Press:

https://finishinglinepress.com/product_info.php?products_id=1337

Marilyn’s poem “On Hearing the Call to Prayer Over the Marcellus Shale on Easter Morning” was awarded A Room of Her Own Foundation’s Orlando Prize, fall 2012, appeared in the Los Angeles Review.

View it at http://aroomofherownfoundation.org/on-hearing-the-call-to-prayer-over-the-marcellus-shale-on-easter-morning-by-marilyn-mccabe/

Her work has appeared in literary magazines such as Nimrod, Valparaiso Poetry Review, and Painted Bride Quarterly, French translations and songs on Numero Cinq, and a video-poem on The Continental Review.

Visit Marilyn’s blog about writing and reading at marilynonaroll.wordpress.com

Read more of Marilyn’s work online:

Valparaiso Literary Review:

http://www.valpo.edu/vpr/v14n1/v14n1poetry/mccabelakeshore.php

The Cortland Review:

http://www.cortlandreview.com/issue/52/mccabe.php

Interview at TNB:

http://www.thenervousbreakdown.com/tnbpoetry/2012/04/marilyn-mccabe-the-tnb-self-interview/

 

Happy reading, y’all!

xo

Mary

Monday Must Read! Diana Whitney: Wanting It

Monday Must Read!

DianaWhitneyheadshotThis week meet Diana Whitney. Diana’s first book of poetry, Wanting It, was released in 2014 by Harbor Mountain Press and became an indie bestseller. Wanting It won the Rubery International Book Award in the UK and was shortlisted for the Julie Suk Award here in the US.  Diana is the poetry columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle and the winner of the 2015 Women’s National Book Association poetry prize, selected by Ellen Bass.  She is grateful to have received grants and fellowships from the Sustainable Arts Foundation and the Vermont Studio Center.

Diana’s poems, essays, and book reviews have appeared in The Boston Globe, The Washington Post, The Crab Orchard Review, The Rumpus, Mud Season Review, and many more. Her irreverent parenting column, Spilt Milk, was syndicated for years, ran as a public radio commentary series, and is currently being collected into a risky memoir about motherhood and sexuality.  A yoga teacher by trade, Diana blogs about the darker side of mothering for The Huffington Post and runs a yoga studio in Brattleboro, Vermont, where she lives with her husband, two daughters, and thirteen chickens.

Visit Diana’s website: www.diana-whitney.com

Get Diana’s book:

http://www.spdbooks.org/Producte/9780988275522/wanting-it.aspx

Reviews of Diana’s book, Wanting It:

Gulf Coast Magazine:

http://gulfcoastmag.org/online/blog/wanting-it,-a-review/

Coal Hill Review: 

http://www.coalhillreview.com/book-review-wanting-it-by-diana-whitney/

Read Diana’s work online:

New poems:

Mud Season Review

 http://mudseasonreview.com/2015/07/poetry-issue-11/

One: Jacar Press

http://one.jacarpress.com/?s=Diana+Whitney#Diana%20Whitney

Book Reviews:

http://www.sfgate.com/books/article/Poetry-John-Burnside-Jane-Hirshfield-Rebecca-6401935.php

Essays:

http://numerocinqmagazine.com/2013/08/10/kissing-essay-diana-whitney/

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/diana-whitney/raising-a-rock-star_b_5888600.html

Author interviews:

http://mudseasonreview.com/2015/07/you-never-know-when-youre-working/

http://www.penparentis.org/interview-with-poet-diana-whitney/

 

Happy reading!

xo

Mary

 

 

Monday Must Read! Therése Halscheid: Frozen Latitudes

 

Monday Must Read! 

Therése HalscheidThis week, meet Therése Halscheid. Therése’s new book Frozen Latitudes (Press 53), won the Eric Hoffer Book Award, HM for Poetry. Other collections include Uncommon Geography,Without Home, Powertalk, and a Greatest Hits chapbook award.

Her poems and essays have appeared in many journals, among them The Gettysburg Review,Tampa Review, Crab Orchard Review, Natural Bridge.

By way of house-sitting, she has lived the life of an itinerant writer. Her travels have taken her from a swamp in the Florida Panhandle to the Arctic north of Alaska, where she lived with and taught an Eskimo Inupiaq tribe.

Visit Therése’s website: www.ThereseHalscheid.com

Monday Must Read! Ellen Hagan: Hemisphere and Crowned

Monday Must Read! 

Hagan_Headshot_BWThis weeek, meet Ellen Hagan, writer, performer, and educator. Her latest collection of poetry Hemisphere was released from Northwestern University Press, Spring 2015. Ellen’s poems and essays can be found in the pages of Creative Nonfiction, Underwired Magazine, She Walks in Beauty (edited by Caroline Kennedy), Huizache, Small Batch, and Southern Sin. Her first collection of poetry, Crowned was published by Sawyer House Press in 2010.

Ellen recently joined the po­etry faculty at West Virginia Wesleyan in their low-residency MFA program. She teaches Memoir, Poetry & Nature, and co-leads the Alice Hoffman Young Writer’s Retreat at Adelphi University. She is Poetry Chair of the DreamYard Project. A proud Kentucky writer, Ellen is a member of the Affrilachian Poets, Conjure Women, and is co-founder of the girlstory collective. She lives with her husband and daughters in New York City.

Website

 http://www.ellenhagan.com

Buy Local

Hemisphere: Poems | IndieBound

Review

BOOK: Ellen Hagan’s ‘Hemisphere’ – LEO Weekly

Duende Literary Magazine

http://www.duendeliterary.org/ellen-hagan/

Monday Must Read! Marcene Gandolfo: Angles of Departure

11222301_10206983464528561_8819456232922751560_nMonday Must Read!

This week, meet Marcene Gandolfo. Her debut book, Angles of Departure, recently won Foreword Reviews’ Silver Book of the Year Award in Poetry. Marcene’s poems have been published widely in literary journals, including Poet Lore, Bellingham Review, Bayou, DMQ Review, and Paterson Literary Review. She has taught writing and literature at several northern California colleges.

Get Marcene’s Book: http://www.amazon.com/Angles-Departure-Marcene-Gandolfo/dp/1625490658

Marcene’s Website

http://www.marcenegandolfo.com/

Reviews of Marcene’s Book:

http://www.sundresspublications.com/stirring/archives/v17/e7/gandolfo.htm

http://thewideningspell.blogspot.com/search?updated-min=2014-01-01T00:00:00-08:00&updated-max=2015-01-01T00:00:00-08:00&max-results=3

More from Marcene Online:

Bellingham Review

http://bhreview.org/2014/10/05/after/

http://bhreview.org/2014/10/05/again/

http://bhreview.org/2014/10/05/broken-chord/

Jet Fuel Review

http://www.jetfuelreview.com/previous-issues/issue-8-fall-2014/poetry/marcene-gandolfo/

DMQ Review

http://www.dmqreview.com/15Spring/index2.h

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