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Home / home / LET THE DEAD IN Receives Glowing Review in Lightwood Press #10

Jun 29 2022

LET THE DEAD IN Receives Glowing Review in Lightwood Press #10

"Agostini’s socially and spiritually aware poetry collection 'Let the Dead In' focuses on the duality between love and hate along with the way that these concepts integrate and clash"

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Poet Robyn Hager reviews Saida Agostini's daring first collection let the dead in in the 10th edition of Lightwood. In her review, Hager praises Agostini's social and spiritual awareness as she contends with the violence and oppression facing black people in the United States. Below, read a small excerpt. Read the entire review in Lightwood's new issue here. Order let the dead in here.

Agostini successfully juxtaposes stark images from her life with deeply entrancing metaphors, and most poignantly in her poem "what love is" she compares the images of turmoil she witnesses between her parents with a dead buck on the side of the road whose

flesh ripped/exposing a dark black machine/so soft, stinking and fragile that years/later you’ll remember the risk of loving/something that wild

The author’s ability to display these powerful, and sometimes gruesome, epithets about life shines through in the entirety of her collection.

Read the full review Order let the dead in

Tim Cahill calls ‘Navigating the Divide’ the “Most Rewarding Book I’ve Read This Year”

July 23, 2019

Learn what famed travel writer, Tim Cahill, has to say about Linda Watanabe McFerrin’s new ASP Legacy Book, “Navigating the Divide.”

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Joanna Biggar Reveals the Heart’s Center of her Newest Novel

July 19, 2019

After 2015’s That Paris Year which followed a group of young women on their year-abroad at the Sorbonne—their youthful flings as well as their many rites of adulthood— Joanna Biggar is bringing its spiritual sequel Melanie’s Song overseas to her own hometown in the United States. Set in Califonia amid the cultural revolution of the late 60s early 70s, Melanie’s Song, while not a direct sequel to That Paris Year shares many of its characters and its familiar, lavish lyrical style. In MS, J.J., the protagonist of That Paris Year, a young reporter, is on a quest to find her missing friend, Melanie (the archetypal shy scholarly type and another character from TPY) who fled her marriage to a straight-laced classical musician in order to hitch-hike to Woodstock and San Francisco.

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What Does Patricia Bracewell Have to Say about “Melanie’s Song”?

July 18, 2019

What does bestselling historical fiction author, Patricia Bracewell, think of Joanna Biggar’s latest novel, “Melanie’s Song”?

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