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Home / home / Rose Solari Reviews Three New Collections Exploring History and Identity

Jan 28 2021

Rose Solari Reviews Three New Collections Exploring History and Identity

The WIROB critic tackles collections by Steven Leyva, Miles David Moore, and Stanley Moss in the January roundup

Rose Solari Poetry Reviews

Rose Solari reviews three exemplar new poetry collections for Washington Independent Review of Books. In her ongoing poetry column, Solari takes great care to tie each of the collections she reviews together and the theme this month is history and identity.

From the beautifully drawn New Orleans of Steven Leyva's The Understudy's Handbook, to the WWII of Miles David Moore's Man on Terrace with Wine, and the deep knowledge and reverence for the history of poetry in Act V, Scene 1 by Stanley Moss, these three collections look at the foundations of history, art, love, and identity: "The Ground Beneath their Feet."

Rose Solari keeps a regular column where she reviews poetry for Washington Independent Review of Book. Her last review tackled the Selected Lucille Clifton and Henry Taylor.

Read the full review The Work of Rose Solari

Keeping up with Reuben Jackson: Bon Appetit, COMP, Friday Night Jazz and more!

May 28, 2021

Reuben Jackson has been busy as of late, publishing in a well-known journal, contributing to a piece in Bon Appetit, hosting a WPFW show and more!

“Persuasive” Woman Drinking Absinthe explores “Illicit Love” in New Review from Compulsive Reader

May 4, 2021

In his new review of Katherine E. Young’s Woman Drinking Absinthe, Charles Rammelkamp delivers a review worthy of the subject. With careful erudition, and no lack of wit, he mines Katherine’s beautiful and heartbreaking poesy about “illicit love” for words of affirmation.

7 Upbeat Poems to Celebrate Poem in Your Pocket Day (with printable PDFs)

April 29, 2021

Poem in Your Pocket Day was created by the Office of the Mayor of New York City in 2002 in partnership with the New York Department of Cultural Affairs and Education. Its goal is to reintroduce poetry, a traditionally performative art, into social situations and normal everyday life. As such, PIYPD marks the end of National Poetry Month, bringing the lessons of the month out into the rest of the year.

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