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

May 04 2021

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

Charles Rammelkamp delivers a witty and erudite review of Katherine E. Young's opus.

NEW REVIEW

In his new review of Katherine E. Young's Woman Drinking Absinthe, Charles Rammelkamp delivers a write-up worthy of its subject. With careful erudition, and no lack of wit, he mines Katherine's beautiful and heartbreaking poesy about "illicit love" for words of affirmation.

"Love, indeed, is the overarching theme of this remarkable collection," writes Charles. And he shows how this recurring theme speaks throughout the book, pointing to the "conflict between marriage and desire," in the early poems, the link between "sex and violence" in poems like "Bluebeard," and the "demimonde of women in the midst of affairs of the heart" as in "A Bar at the Folies-Bergère" and many others.

In these depictions, Charles writes that, "Woman Drinking Absinthe is unflinchingly honest and lyrical."

Read the entire review here.

Full Review on Compulsivereader.com Buy the Book

Katherine E. Young Breaks Down Her New Translation of LOOK AT HIM by Anna Starobinets

September 22, 2020

Katherine E. Young appears on Leslie Pietrzyk “To be Read” blog series to discuss her new translation of a book that “ignited a firestorm” in Russia

Challenge and Ambition: Rose Solari Releases new Poetry Reviews for WIRoB

September 17, 2020

Rose Solari’s reviews this month focus on four collections that “challenge and stretch the reader’s expectations in terms of content, form, or both.”

Rose Solari Joins in a Dickinson Tradition at this Year’s Tell it Slant Festival

September 16, 2020

While the Emily Dickinson poetry marathon is not a marathon in the traditional sense, it does test the endurance, fortitude, and preparedness of all its participants. Over a seven day period, 14 hours in all, participants will read every one of the enigmatic 19th-century poet’s 1,789 poems in the order prescribed by R.W. Franklin’s The Poems of Emily Dickinson.

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