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 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.
Live from the Reading Room Episode 4 (THE HISTORIES)
In this edition of “Live From the Reading Room”, James J. Patterson reads from three histories, Will and Ariel Durrant’s “The Life of Greece,” Edward Gibbon’s “Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire”, and Leo Damrosch’s “The Club.”
He also reads “The Conjecture Chamber” from his first collection of essays BERMUDA SHORTS
New Review of Scattered Clouds Raves “SC is one I return to again and again”
Reuben jackson recieves another glowing review for his collection “Scattered Clouds.”
Rose Reads Episode 4 (Myths and Retellings)
In this episode of Rose Reads, poet Rose Solari talks re-telling poems – by Louise Gluck, Derek Walcott, Anne Sexton, and herself.