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

Shop

Filters

Showing 553–576 of 591 results

Categories

Price filter

553-576 of 591 products

  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Un/Wired by Stephen Bett

    In this, his 18th book of poetry, internationally acclaimed Canadian poet Stephen Bett is back to working the sassy, edgy margins of social satire. Divided into four sections, this book opens with humor; turns to soft-edge and then to hard-edge, wicked, hilarious satire of our vapid monoculture; and concludes with a section of poems bringing in the angst of it all.
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $18.00
    Quickview

    Uncertain Remains by Michael Boughn

    ,
    “Michael Boughn is a cross between John Donne and Attila the Hun.” —Billie Chernicoff
    $18.00
    $18.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Uncomfortable Clowns ms #77 by James Hart III

    These poems by James Hart, III careen in the mind as they do down the page with an eagerness, to apprehend every given vicissitude of moment that comes their way. The tensions one finds, throughout the sequence, reflect the ever-fraught interface of inward and out, self and other, word and world. — Bill Berkson
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Under the Impression by James Berger

    Under the Impression transverses the spongy dents in the surfaces of language and memory. Anti-lyrical and insistently lyrical, frank, interrogative, and punctuated with humor, Berger’s poems articulate brilliantly an inventive scepticism of the real world’s edges and fictions. —Orchid Tierne
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Under the Sky They Lit Cities by Travis Cebula

    Herein lies the poet's confidence in forgotten "tones revealed in full light."  Cebula's poetry, like the city itself is resilient, iridescent, and every time a little different. —Elizabeth Robinson,

    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Understanding Moonseed by Mary Pacifico Curtis

    From love and glamorous success in the early days of Silicon Valley, to saying goodbye to family she never knew in small town Minnesota, these pages take us along on a highly traveled life that can't escape loss. —Rachel Howard
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    UNRULY by Elysia Lucinda Smith

    UNRULY is a book of rude girl poems describing threesomes, freewheeling, Joan of Arc, naked mole rats, and other R rated things. It is also a book about overcoming an upbringing in the Bible Belt. All this converges in a spilling, like when you vomit into your purse in an Uber except in this book you're sober enough to be mad.
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Unusual Woods by Gene Tanta

    "Gene Tanta's Unusual Woods is deceptively simple and candidly devious. Reading it is like looking in a funhouse mirror for the first time." —Mike Topp
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Valency by J. Michael Wahlgren

    A luminous cascade of syntax —Brenda Iijima
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    VEL by Alan Sondheim

    Alan Sondheim is a force of nature: a Category 5 mindstorm blowing in from all points of the compass at once. Coded and plain-speaking, philosophical and emotional, artistic and banal: to read Sondheim is to fall through a wormhole into a full world. And why shouldn't a work of art be a world’ His art is writing as a performance act even more direct than Allen Ginsberg speaking into his tape recorder. — Jim Rosenberg
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Versus by Stacia M. Fleegal

    Stacia Fleegal just can’t stop creating serious noise in her poems. She’s a writer who isn’t afraid to make words crackle and snap, especially about how social class works in America, starting at the bottom and going up. So, fair to say, you should expect something other than the tame lyric in this collection. —Eloise Klein Heal
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Vertigo Diary by Larry Sawyer

    Larry’s poetry gives me the best kind of vertigo: the kind where you’re afraid of falling, but when you do you fall into a soft, meaty, sensual, smart ravine that shakes you pretty good, but instead of killing you it turns you into a Thinking Cocktail. What a scary and fine artist Mr. Sawyer is! —Andrei Codrescu
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Vexed by Jessica Grim

    Grim's style masterly evokes the simplicities of poetry in the "New American" vein, with its fragments of candid observation just shimmering on the surface of the poem, but she allies it with a "post-Language" sensibility that balks before the prospect of a too-fluid Romanticism, thus spicing sensual reverie with documentary relevance. —Brian Kim Stefans
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $20.00
    Quickview

    Via Crucis by Peter Siedlecki, art by Catherine Burchfield Parker

    ,
    Siedlecki’s poetry resonates the surfaces and experiences of Burchfield Parker paintings. The Way of the Cross is understood as spaces of time, moments of loss, forgotten destructive comforts, and nightmare memories. ... This is a tough, beautiful, provoking book of poems. —Geoffrey Gatza
    $20.00
    $20.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Virtual Worlds Virtual People by Kay Porter Winfield

    Poetry and video games don’t often occupy the same space at the same time, but Kay Porter Winfield’s Virtual Worlds Virtual People proves once and for all that they can (and maybe they should). These poems rocket with character-driven action and conflict: electrical shocks, diabolical plots, flashing swords, and cliffhangers galore. —Matt Hart
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    VOLUME ONE (Selected Anonymous Marginalia) by Liam Agrani

    VOLUME ONE represents a decade of research into found language by the poet/editor Liam Agrani. The work is composed solely of direct transcriptions of marginalia from libraries, used bookstores, and various other places. Removed from the context of the books they came from, these works become intimate abstract accidental poems, occupying the space where private literary "criticism" and found poetry meet.
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Vow by Kristina Marie Darling

    In Kristina Marie Darling’s Vow, both text and subtext paint the fraught institution of marriage, particularly the subjectivities of the bride’s several selves. Written in candle, tale, and glass, the book “reveals, harbors, conceals” in an exciting new collection. —Carmen Gimenez Smith
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Walking Dreams, Selected Early Tales by Mark Wallace

    Mark Wallace writes like an avant-garde poet who knows how to tell a good story. Or like a fiction writer who knows how to fill his prose with cutting edge poetry. —Stephen-Paul Martin
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    War on Words : The John Bradley/Tomaz Salamun* Confusement

    "Wow! It might be Nonsalamuns may not enjoy as much as I did, but for our tribe--- I went through different stages: shock, amazement, I was pale, laughter - a lot -, awe, guilt, aphssss!, even my mind wanted to take off for a moment, but mostly gratitude, I was moved; I am moved." - Tomaz Salamun
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Waste by Emily Toder

    Through these honest, prismatic poems, Emily Toder explores what is cast off, what is extra, and what we deem unsalvageable. This book reveals that our garbage can be a lesson in our humanity and, sometimes, that lessons in our humanity are garbage. Either way, both ways, I love this revelatory book. —Sommer Browning
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    Wave Particle Duality by Dana Curtis

    In Wave Particle Duality, Dana Curtis takes us into her nocturnal sphere, the film noir where fission splits the soul, and dark energy is all we have to go on. These are poems full of twisted desire and visionary clarity, pure need and thin hope. Throughout her language is as sharp as a pinprick. She cites Hogarth, which is apt, because Dana Curtis is a moralist, with gallows humor and a sense of the perverse. "Will you be my infidel," she asks? Oh, yes, we think. Just keep on talking. —David Lazar
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    What A Bicycle Can Carry by Laura Madeline Wiseman

    In a moment when our nation feels divided and strange, Wiseman’s authoritative, sensitive guide provides a bicycle-eye view of a beautiful, complicated country. —Nancy Reddy
    $16.00
    $16.00
  • $16.00
    Quickview

    What She Knows by Marcia Roberts

    By assembling these fragments into a whole, the poet Marcia Roberts has saved telling moments from a lifetime's experience; and having done so with care, now generously shares them. —Tom Clark
    $16.00
    $16.00