"Certainty in these poems is recognized as a violence, and one with a quiver of attendant dangers, like oppression, delusions of grandeur and of superiority, and the profound poetic risk of not seeing the ever-shifting world, with all its joys and sorrows, that is always in front of you, and never standing still."
Saturday, September 19, 2020
Eryn Green Reviews Indian Summer Recycling at Interim: A Journal of Poetry & Poetics
Evan Gray reviews Indian Summer Recycling for DIAGRAM
"Death, dying, decaying is a generative, natural process in Indian Summer Recycling. This requires a new perspective, one that constantly needs reframing.How we each ache and long to be put to rest in ways similar to the 'Spent firework in the grass' that 'must have been some pretty thing.' How we long to become 'Micronutrients from decomposers' that are small but necessary to lifeforms, like the 'Hatchling insects' which 'obscure the clarity of the riverbed,'" etc.
James Knippen reviews Indian Summer Recycling for Tarpaulin Sky
“These poems call us to reflect on how our lives impact and are impacted by nature in ways we don’t typically think about, even as our attention and our memories are composted by a living, moving world, constantly recycling itself.”
Salt Lake City Art
Mightily glad for another go-round with Salt Lake City Art during quarantine this spring.