The finest in global independent publishing.
Contact us at editor@blazevox.org

Poetry

Filters

Showing 325–336 of 510 results

Categories

Price filter

325-336 of 510 products

  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Projection Machine by Debrah Morkun

    In the land of All Language, replete with spoken gold, Debrah Morkun spins poems, then weaves this Projection Machine. This original or pre-. And when reflection mazes and you are inside and civilization itself a book read in all directions, she will take your eyes by the hand and lead you on. I am waiting for you there. —Bob Holman
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Province of Numb Errs by Jared Schickling

    Jared Schickling’s Province of Numb Errs is a quirky, sincere and often funny homage to the long arms of his Catholic upbringing. Less dour than Stephen Daedalus and the other cohorts of Joyce’s imagination, the narrators in these poems gleefully yoke together Biblical clichés and homespun homilies, xenophobic injunctions and commonsense imperatives, and, per rhetoric, the highfalutin’ and colloquial. —Tyrone Williams
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $10.00
    Quickview

    Puddles of An Open by Paige Melin

    Through her provocative syntactic ruptures and stream-of-consciousess narrative style, Melin subtly and gracefully interrogates the boundaries between interior and exterior, subject and object, self and world. Puddles of an Open is a stunning debut, as innovative in its technique as it is in its philosophical assertions. —Kristina Marie Darling
    $10.00
    $10.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Rain Check Poems by Aaron Simon

    Aaron Simon's lines feel like strokes of a pre-CBS Jazzmaster. Not plastic. More like rosewood with at least a Gibson tuneOmatic bridge. A brrruummm alliteration where each word-note contains the artful play of improv and composition colliding. Aaron Simon is a good band whose record is killing it on the deck these days. —Thurston Moore
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Rambo Goes to Idaho by Scott Abels

    In Rambo Goes to Idaho, Scott Abels has blurred the lines between pop culture and personal struggle, the east and the west, God and Gene Simmons. At once heroic and elegiac, these poems balance on a knife edge not unlike Rambo’s, and what’s most beautiful here is that they sometimes get cut. —Clay Matthews
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $18.00
    Quickview

    Rearview Mirror by Charles Borkhuis

    ,
    The rapidity & delight of Charles Borkhuis’s poetry, set against the serious matters of truth & lies, of light & darkness, is difficult to capture & impossible to escape. And all of this he delivers with a master’s sure sense of humor & grief, the badge of a poet at the top of his powers, which I read now with ever-growing delight, & still can’t stop reading. —Jerome Rothenberg
    $18.00
    $18.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Reflections Of Hostile Revelries by Jennifer C. Wolfe

    Jennifer C. Wolfe’s new collection Reflections of Hostile Revelries is the voice in our heads that needs to be spoken. In this progressive work, Wolfe targets our richest and most powerful enemies addressing their essential flaws and epic mistakes while reminding the reader these are the exact people running our countries. Reflections of Hostile Revelries is direct and honest oral poetics and will leave you tired, but eager to read on. —Jordan Antonucci
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Requited by Kristina Marie Darling

    The prose poems that open Kristina Marie Darling’s Requited gradually recede, through erasure, into the quieter fragments of the “Epilogue.” The closing section deftly reframes the juxtapositions and silences that come before, making one question whether the collection’s title suggests love or retaliation. —Sandra Lim
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Responsibilities of the Obsessed by Goro Takano

    Telephones ring “hollow and blank”; “He has no idea what he’ll become. / All he knows is / that tomorrow will be a sunny day / for everybody else.” Dementia and demolished nuclear plants in an immense desert: the artificial landscapes created by Goro Takano in his second book are chillingly, and humorously, real. —Jane Joritz-Nakagawa
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    ROMANCE WITH SMALL-TIME CROOKS by Alexis Ivy

    Alexis Ivy's jagged, hoarse, and beautiful poems recount a journey through a hell that looks a lot like honky-tonk America: the drugs, the booze, the sex— and the promise of transcendence everywhere just out of reach. There is nothing small-time about Romance With Small-Time Crooks. It is an extraordinary book. —Richard Hoffman
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Rude Girl by John Sakkis

    In Rude Girl, light "scrime[s]," a girl secretly "places a button under her tongue," and a tide is a "pseudonym" both for not speaking (right then) and for what comes after: the start of seeing "the things [in front of]" (my brackets), which in fact "were always [in front of]."  There's an attention too, in John Sakkis's beautiful book, to the "frequency and occurence" with which these things happened.  Are happening. Like "years or color."  Loved these poems.  Hope you will too.  Bhanu Kapil
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Ruin by Luke McMullan

    ‘The Ruin’ is the remaining fragment of an eighth-century Anglo-Saxon poem that describes the collapsed arches and rubble-strewn site of the old Roman baths at the city of Bath. Here Luke McMullan offers a translation in two strands that cross—poem and gloss—with the generous gift also of a scaffolding: word-tables that reveal for a reader the possible constellations of meanings of the poem’s key words, situating this gorgeous text within the history of its previous translation. —Lisa Robertson
    $16.00
    $16.00