Next book

Love and Death

A BOOK OF POEMS

Strong themes keep these traditional poems from feeling outdated.

Lewinter (Elementary Number Theory with Programming, 2015, etc.) channels Tennyson and Dickinson in well-constructed but old-fashioned poems about loss and the search for true love.

Reflecting both his Ph.D. in mathematics and his MFA in music, Lewinter’s poetry marries precise form with pleasing rhythm. Although the stanza structure varies, lines unfailingly rhyme, either in an ABAB or AABB pattern. Along with end rhymes, internal half-rhymes and alliteration accentuate the flow. The often archaic poetic vocabulary—“Tis,” “oft,” “naught,” “yore,” “nary,” “whence,” and so on—is of a piece with the conventional rhyming. As the title suggests, many of the poems are elegies for the lost: his Holocaust survivor father, dead friends, and former lovers. Lewinter also commemorates soldiers’ sacrifices and marvels that, decades later, he still misses his mother’s reassuring love. There are echoes of Dickinson in Lewinter’s imagined collision with death: “Death brushed by me yesterday, / It was the briefest meeting. / I hurried on along my way, / The encounter short and fleeting!” Elsewhere, he recalls Tennyson by celebrating the heights of human achievement (“At Times When I, with Spirits Low” and “It Can Be Done”) or evoking unrequited courtly love (“You Love Me Not As I Love You”). Travel pieces take on the weight of epic journeys—“Who knows what lies in store for me? / Some say a journey to the sea. / Then, a westbound cloud I’ll board”—with a scene on a cruise providing a clear contrast between hedonism and “lofty things that truly matter.” Cheesy patriotic poems, overabundant exclamation points, and confusingly unpunctuated lines (“Fear you are not wanted here,” “Stranger you affected me”) are minor drawbacks, and more attention could be given to layout. However, homosexual love is a compassionate theme, as in “Homophobes” and “Fly Away,” in which “love demands that one defies / Any power or force or will or whim / That would deny the love ’tween me and him.”

Strong themes keep these traditional poems from feeling outdated.

Pub Date: Aug. 17, 2015

ISBN: 978-1-5168-6595-6

Page Count: 90

Publisher: CreateSpace

Review Posted Online: Oct. 8, 2015

Next book

STATES OF UNITEDNESS

POEMS

A volume of poetry that shines when focused on the author’s experiences of race and culture.

A collection speaks in part to the poet’s Mexican-American heritage.

In these multifaceted poems, Mexico-born, Houston-raised Salazar (Of Dreams and Thorns, 2017) explores general human themes like love and war in addition to specific experiences as a person of color. The book begins with a sensual meditation on desire, featuring luscious descriptions of a lover, from lips “moist like youth” to the body’s “softest velvet” slopes. The poems shift to odes to cultural icons like the Tejano star Selena and Mexican-German painter Frida Kahlo as well as occasion pieces honoring his brother’s 40th birthday and a friend’s mother’s memorial service. The author hits his stride when he delves into identity. In “I Am Not Brown,” he contemplates the societal implications of skin tone and his inability to fit into the rigid category of Caucasian or Latino. “For white and black and brown alike / Are slaves to history’s brush strokes,” he writes. “Grateful for the Work,” perhaps Salazar’s loveliest poem, catalogs the day of a laborer, starting with an early morning awakening and following him as he toils in 100-degree heat, enjoys tacos from his lunch pail, buys beverages from a child’s lemonade stand, and returns home to an equally hard-working wife. The author then makes an abrupt turn toward Syria in a series of poems that condemn that country’s president, Bashar Hafez al-Assad. They serve as a rallying cry for Syrians and grieve for the murdered masses. Salazar’s closing poem, “Sons of Bitches,” is a clunky rant about a 20-year-old immigrant shot in the head by a U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agent. The gratuitous violence and political theologizing are ill at ease with the intimate, personal experiences that preceded them, such as the fablelike “A Mexican is Made of This,” in which Salazar beautifully describes the “rainbows, bronze, backbone, butterflies” that his people embody.

A volume of poetry that shines when focused on the author’s experiences of race and culture.

Pub Date: Aug. 1, 2018

ISBN: 978-0-9991496-3-8

Page Count: 166

Publisher: Bronze Diamond Productions

Review Posted Online: Sept. 27, 2018

Awards & Accolades

Our Verdict

  • Our Verdict
  • GET IT

Next book

Body Archaeology

Poems and images that ask readers to appreciate a searching body for its beauty and grace.

Awards & Accolades

Our Verdict

  • Our Verdict
  • GET IT

Diehl’s debut poetry collection showcases the arduous search for human connection and self-understanding.

In free verse poems that combine strong metaphors with prosaic passages, the poet wanders along a lifelong path of self-knowledge. She first describes it as a “pilgrimage…to accept what’s been deemed unworthy inside us,” and the trail leads to important insights. In a plainly stated yet necessary reminder, the author asserts that being human, despite the loneliness one may encounter, “is not a solitary pursuit.” Above all else, the book voices a desire for transparency in the self and in others. In “Clear Stream,” moving water illuminates objects within it, even as mystery waits at the bottom, and the water’s clarity corresponds to the speaker’s offering of his- or herself to view: “Here I am. // Come see me if you want.” Sometimes the tumble of words in these short stanzas suggests a pouring forth of injury: “It’s the show-stopping blow of loss upending a heart pain over pain till capacity for love regulates its beating.” Readers will understand a back story involving love and loss, difficulty in communication, sadness, and acceptance of children growing up. The poems gain strength from well-chosen accompanying images, including sketches and paintings by Dimenichi and colorful works by Jamaican-born painter Powell that enrich the verbal landscape. Several full-page images by each artist appear, suggesting a thematic connection or amplifying an emotion in a given poem. A richly textured, grand illustration of a tree by Dimenichi, for example, appears alongside a poem that celebrates the inspiration of such towering entities. A poem concerned with self-reflection joins a Powell painting of floating, twinned female forms. The figures seem to both depict and satisfy the speaker’s need to be seen, with their emphasis on mirror images, body doubles, and echoes of shapes. Even the windshield of a car can be a “two way mirror” behind which the driver is “invisible to life outside.” An explicitly female body is glimpsed in the sketches, and the warm, dreamlike compositions give it substance.

Poems and images that ask readers to appreciate a searching body for its beauty and grace.

Pub Date: July 1, 2015

ISBN: 978-1-304-13091-4

Page Count: 58

Publisher: Lulu

Review Posted Online: May 18, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2016

Close Quickview