Viva the camera as a weapon against those who seek to alter history. Indeed, memory and truth are happily captured in a photo. For nearly fifty years, on hundreds of assignment for Life and other magazines, Ted Polumbaum traveled the... Read More
This collection of poetry soars above, like the trees in the forest that inspired it. For anyone who’s ever pondered the secret life of a forest or aspired to be an unseen observer among the trees, Joe Rosenblatt’s poetry collection... Read More
The riffing, run-at-the-mouth quality of Sandra Simonds’s acerbic, indulgent work is exactly the style to broaden contemporary poetry’s appeal. The author of three previous collections, Simonds teaches English and Humanities at... Read More
Bellefeuille delivers a warm, inviting, coffee-rich book that’s perfect for those who are passionate about their cups of joe. A rich cup of coffee and a good book make a great pair. They are brought together in "One Cup at a Time", a... Read More
Science fiction and transcendental mystery take this epic poem to stellar heights of academic debate. A bevy of poetic muses and an intelligent strain of mushrooms propel this three-part tribute to Mother Earth. "Galaxia", by Alex Andor... Read More
A poet for whom face value represents life at its most treacherous, Richard Siken’s 2004 first collection, Crush, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and won the Thomas Gunn Award and a Lambda Literary Award.... Read More
Amusement abounds in this non-sequitur-filled adventure that’s a mix of noir detective novel and psychedelic cartoon. You can’t get much weirder than Captain Coconut’s method of mystery solving or wackier than the... Read More
Czaga expresses her unique poetic voice in her first collection, witty, moving, and crafted seamlessly. Though this is her first collection, Kayla Czaga’s poems have been published in The Walrus, qwerty, The Literary Review of Canada,... Read More