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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 Moon and Other Inventions: Poems After Joseph Cornell by Kristina Marie Darling
PoetryDarling creates a lattice of explicitly feminine apperception around the works of Joseph Cornell. The result is a haunting parascription, of a piece with Cornell's metaphysical idiom while substantially Othering any sustained encounter with his work. —G.C. Waldrep$16.00 -
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The Moon Blooms in Occupied Hours by Anis Shivani
PoetryShivani is at the height of his powers as his lens sweeps with cinematic confidence from the grand to the minute and his voice encompasses the roaring horrors of war and the quieter moments of reflection and grace.—Wendy Chin-Tanne$16.00 -
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The Mouth Of The Bay by Michael Ruby
PoetryIn poems written on the rocky coast of Frenchman Bay in Maine, Michael Ruby begins with wisdom and ends with delight, reversing Frost’s famous dictum about poetry. The Mouth of the Bay begins with the wisdom of the Eleatic philosophers on the coasts of southern Italy and Sicily—“There is no beginning and there is no end”—and their calls for purification. Ruby writes the words that appear in his mind when he repeats sayings of Pythagoras, Xenophanes, Empedocles and others.$16.00 -
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The Olfactions: Poems on Perfume by Anne Gorrick
PoetrySomeone once said that after a Bach sonata, the silence that follows is still Bach. Well, after a poem from Anne Gorrick, the silence that follows is a whiff of patchouli, tar, vanilla, tea and other things... Thank you. Thank you. —Fabrice Penot,$16.00 -
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The Paris Poems by Suzanne Burns
Poetrythis is subject matter clichéd a century ago; all of it forced into newness, not by the references of modernity, but by the observance of a well-referenced poetess of now— a potential beginning for this century's cliché. —c.vance,$16.00 -
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The Pink by Jared Schickling
Poetry“The Pink” reads like a bio-centric futurist work of patterned effeminate lyricism and distortion whose themes are fatherhood, motherhood, and childhood, while playing heartily at inherited themes and motifs through re-worked fairy tales, observations (recordings), and children’s verses.$16.00 -
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The Radiant World by Dan Featherston
PoetryDan Featherston is the author of three other booklength collections of poetry, The Clock Maker's Memoir (Cuneiform Press, 2007), United States (Factory School, 2005), and Into the Earth (Quarry Press, 2005), as well as five shorter collections. He lives in Philadelphia and teach at Temple.$16.00 -
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The Rapture of Eddy Daemon: Volume I The Posthuman Series by Daniel Y. Harris
PoetryFinally: a posthuman translation of Shakespeare. I'm glad Daniel Y. Harris beat Watson at it. There are still large chunks of human in his kind lineation." —Andrei Codrescu$16.00 -
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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 Refinery by janna plant
PoetryJanna Plant is an alchemist. She unearths the twin elements of humor and despair from their commonplace lodgings in the language, and reconstitutes them as brilliance. —Anne Kennedy$16.00 -
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The Reganites: Vol 1 & Vol 2 by Tim Roberts
PoetryHere is a monstrous demonstration of the bloat conditions of our world. Written to extremes, as if to show how truly, really, impossible the current state of language and culture has become. What can Literature do except stop a door—or trip us up, physically as well as lyrically? Who speaks in this massive text, elegantly crafted on the page in wry, deliberate, imitation of a sacred text, twin-columned? —Johanna Drucker$50.00