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The Homesick Mortician by Peter Mladinic
New Releases, PoetryMladinic gives us a world where “a man with a wooden leg/ and a boy in a white shirt/ talk weather/ and look like an argument.” The strange and the mundane combine into sharp mystery. This is exquisite poetry and worthy of your time. —Jeff Weddle$18.00 -
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The Long Way Home by Leonard Gontarek
New Releases, PoetryGontarek's enthusiasm and imagination pour through poem after poem: surprising juxtapositions and fragments from Krishnamurti and other meditative guides and philosophers show a wide range of experiences and objects in a kind of praise song. —Sean Singer$26.00 -
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The Lost Positive by Elizabeth Strauss Friedman
New Releases, PoetryIn The Lost Positive, her stellar second collection of poetry, Elizabeth Strauss Friedman casts the slog of domestic, compulsory heterosexuality into the stars—the result is a new mythology, “a wandering bruise / of glamour,” in which women refuse to negatively refract. —Jenny Molberg$18.00 -
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The Metempsychosis of Salvador Dracu by Daniel Y. Harris (Volume VI of The Posthuman Series)
New Releases, PoetryDaniel Y. Harris’ The Posthuman Series is an amazing tour de force! —Marjorie Perloff$22.00 -
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The Misprision of Agon Hack (Volume IV: The Posthuman Series) by Daniel Y. Harris
New Releases, PoetryDaniel Y. Harris’ Posthuman Series is an amazing tour de force! —Marjorie Perloff$18.00 -
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The Real World by Emma Winsor Wood
New Releases, PoetryMost of us don’t know how to deal with the reality of the unrealities in which we find ourselves living. Wood shows us one way to do so—and it’s a great one, one in which we can be real. — Lyn Hejinian$16.00 -
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The Resurrection of Maximillian Pissante (Volume V: The Posthuman Series) by Daniel Y. Harris
New Releases, PoetryDaniel Y. Harris’ Posthuman Series is an intoxicating brew of quasis: scientific, esoteric, bibliographic, geologic, lettristic. Who knows what poetry lurks in the heart of codes? It’s as if we are privy to the history of knowledge from its other side, before as much as after. These poems are an explosion in a pataquerics factory. —Charles Bernstein$18.00 -
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The Strikeout Artist by Joseph Bates
Fiction, New ReleasesYou don’t have to know anything about baseball to fall in love with this astonishing novel in which Franz Kafka performs as an unlikely star pitcher. Delighted by Bates’s kinetic, daring plot, you’ll have to stop often to laugh, then in the next moment you’ll be drawn up short in wonder by the surprisingly tender heart of this novel. —Lee Upton$22.00 -
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The Sun Shows How it’s Done by Sandy Olson Hill
Fiction, New ReleasesSandy Olson Hill writes hard-hitting poetic short stories. This book is dark and moving, and it never flinches from the really tough stuff. —Jeff Parker$12.00 -
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The Thirteenth Studebaker by Robert Wexelblatt
Fiction, New ReleasesWexelblatt’s book is laden with wit, with wry observations, gentle sarcasm, and wicked ironies. It always has just enough laughter to keep its characters (and the reader) from spinning off into the abysses. —Fred Marchant, -
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The Trapeze of Your Flesh by Charles Rammelkamp
New Releases, PoetryCharles Rammelkamp’s exposition of the “flesh trapeze” that swings through American entertainment and culture, via the voices of some of its most prominent acrobats, is vital to an understanding of our culture. —Roman Gladstone$20.00