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Threading Stone
By Carey Scott Wilkerson   
Reviewed by Jeremy M. Downes

One of the central poems of Wilkerson’s attractive first book, Threading Stone, unravels the title’s mystery, as the Greek hero Theseus is challenged to follow the thread (the gift of Ariadne) through the great stone labyrinth at Knossos. Even for Theseus, this is much harder than it first appears; not only is there the monstrous Minotaur, but the very act of “threading the stone”—through using language, through creating narrative—is called into question by this book’s “rhizomic world” where every thread appears to lead in multiple directions.

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To Live & Write in Dixie
By P. T. Paul;  Foreword by Frye Gaillard 
Reviewed by Jim Murphy

The familiar magic of jubilee on the Alabama coast, that sudden inversion of the natural order of things in the water that depletes its oxygen and sends its life forms scrambling onto the shore, is a guiding metaphor for P.T. Paul’s To Live and Write in Dixie. As on a jubilee night when strangeness and wonder mingle on the beach, and the ocean’s secrets are visible for all to see in profusion, Paul’s book is a wildly diverse, entertaining collection, intertwining accomplished literary poetry and prose, autobiography, historiography, cultural studies, and good old fashioned yarn spinning to create a vibrant, intertextual engagement with her central concerns: What does it mean to be both of and apart from the South, working through all its contradictory wonders and tragedies?

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Dead Letters
By Alan May;  Illustrations by Tom Wegrzynowski and Alan May 
Reviewed by Carey Scott Wilkerson

In a time when perhaps too few poets are willing to explore the ontological rift between language and meaning, discovering Alan May’s book Dead Letters is an occasion both for a new mode of celebration and some old-fashioned investigation of the poetic project itself. This daring collection—by turns experimental and surreal, meditative and poignant—is indeed a powerfully imagined and, finally, astonishing achievement.

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Cyclones in High Northern Latitudes
By Jeffrey Side  and Jake Berry; drawings and cover art by Rich Curtis
Reviewed by Carey Scott Wilkerson

In Cyclones in High Northern Latitudes, Jeffrey Side and Jake Berry tell strange, beautiful tales. Here are two extraordinary poets collaborating, at once, in mythological structures and closely observed moments of luminous experience. Indeed, Cyclones in High Northern Latitudes is a dazzling storm of lyrical imagery, an emergency beacon telling us that language and life are perilously, delightfully interpenetrated in the laboratories of the experimental poetic.
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Portions
By Hank Lazer   
Reviewed by Sue B. Walker

Hank Lazer’s fifteenth book of poetry, Portions, is a “language house a / moving place that / feeds & carries,” a linguistic portioning that addresses how it is “to be”; it is “a way / to see out / to learn of / the world we / miraculous stand upon” (“House,” “Nature”). The book is an “invitation into a / new way of / saying (“Invitation”) that is in keeping with Heidegger’s claim that “language is the house of Being” (On The Way To Language). Portions is a “secret & saving / way through the / world in a thin book” (“Way”).
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Equivocal Blessings
By Mary Carol Moran   
Reviewed by Melissa Dickson Blackburn

Strewn with frequent sonnets and the occasional villanelle—as well as historical, literary, and personal reflections—Mary Carol Moran’s Equivocal Blessings delves into the penance we all must pay to the loved, the lost, the dead, and the remembered. Divided into three sections—“Clearing,” “Breathe With Me,” and “Strong Bones”—Equivocal Blessings features diverse approaches and narrative themes....

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Drew: Poems from Blue Water
By Robert Gray   
Reviewed by Russ Kesler

Robert Gray’s book Drew: Poems from Blue Water straddles two genres. In its subject matter and narrative arc, it is a memoir of the life and death of Gray’s older brother Drew. Broken into seventeen discrete sections, the story centers around the family’s cabin at a central Alabama lake. Yet that story is told via a series of poems, each section comprised of one to four poems. As memoir, the book is a moving and compelling tale.
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Blood Ties & Brown Liquor
By Sean Hill   
Reviewed by Bruce Alford

The cover illustration of Sean Hill’s debut collection is a striking detail from a watercolor, circa 1939, by Frank Stanley Herring. A crowd of “colored” people, leaning on trees or sitting on benches, blends into a storefront. The buildings are copper-colored and deep red. Shades of red, from strawberry to rich rust, dominate. This is Milledgeville, Georgia, the setting of Hill’s book. Specifically, this is McIntosh Street—as red as a McIntosh apple—named for a Scottish clan whose tartans were chiefly red. “McIntosh Street the sign reads,” writes Hill in the poem entitled “Nigger Street 1937.”
Black people have settled here and transformed the place into something that surpasses the single shade the street sign implies. Now the street is red....
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Morning Haiku
By Sonia Sanchez   
Reviewed by Barry George

Although “Alabama writer” and “haiku poet” are not associations which readily spring to mind in relation to Sonia Sanchez, both her Southern roots and life-long passion for haiku figure prominently in Morning Haiku. Sanchez, born and raised in Birmingham, moved to Harlem in her late teens. At twenty-one, as she recounts in the book’s preface, she experienced “an awakening,” reading haiku in New York’s 8th Street Bookstore. Ever since, she has revered this “tough form disguised in beauty and insight,” the one-breath poem that makes us alive to the moment.
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She Said
By Sue Walker   
Reviewed by Celia Lewis

She Said demonstrates Sue Walker’s finely honed ear for poetic language (including the nuanced rhythms of southern speech), an unerring sense for authentic characters, and a command of the lyrical narrative. She sets herself the daunting task of consistently engaging the reader while using “she said” in each poem. A Houdini of a tale-teller, she seamlessly succeeds, never allowing the tension of these forty-eight poems to falter or fail. It is a tour-de-force of word play, brimming with joyous riffs of sound.
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American Rendering: New and Selected Poems
By Andrew Hudgins   
Reviewed by Jennifer Horne

Few poets writing today engage so thoroughly with questions of good and evil as does Andrew Hudgins. Since his first book, Saints and Strangers, twenty-five years ago, Hudgins has consistently, unflinchingly, investigated human nature, and why we so often fail ourselves and one another.
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Blessings and Curses
By Anne Whitehouse   
Reviewed by Book Noted

From the publisher: Blessings and Curses by New York poet Anne Whitehouse is a series of [twenty-four] curses and [forty] blessings that cover territory both familiar and deeply personal. Both curses and blessings are quietly illuminating, neither too full of sadness nor of joy rather a perfect balance of what a life brings and what a perceptive heart has gleaned. [Whitehouse] writes with a sure hand, schooled in the craft of poetry so that what she has to impart has the right language to say it without interruption.
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Bottle Tree
By Jennifer Horne   
Reviewed by Kathleen Thompson

Jennifer Horne’s first full-length poetry book is as stimulating and breath-catching as its initial promise. The cover art, the title, and its epigraphs are all rife with folk art, superstition, and history. Eudora Welty’s words alone conjure up the image of Cash McCord slinging rocks into a bottle tree as Livvie’s old Solomon lies inside dying—another titillating tale told on a porch aptly framed with southern yard art. And the framework for this book? Oh, no—it has thirteen parts.
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Dark Village Haiku
By Jeremy M. Downes   
Reviewed by Book Noted

From the publisher: The Alabama State Poetry Society’s Annual John and Miriam Morris Memorial Chapbook Competition 2007 winner is a thought provoking collection of poetry rich with beauty and artistry.
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I Am By Nature a Conflagration
By Jessica Renee Bowden Jones   
Reviewed by Book Noted

From the publisher: Poetry expresses what is inside us—the stuff that can’t help escaping the boundaries we set. This book’s poetry journeys through childhood, teenage years, and adulthood; it aims at immersion in each ages’ passions, confusions, enlightenments, and play with language. The photography offers illustrations for the poems, but also offers unique perspectives on the subject matter. The combination of the two art forms expresses the rage against and pleasure in each age group’s realizations; it compares and contrasts them, questions them, and sometimes answers them.
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live, from the emergency room
By Lori Lasseter Hamilton   
Reviewed by Book Noted

From the publisher: This is an amazing group of powerful poems drawn from [Lori Lasseter Hamilton’s] experiences as a rape survivor.
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How God Ends Us
By DéLana R. A. Dameron   
Reviewed by M. Dickson Blackburn

DéLana R. A. Dameron has written a terrific book in the original sense of the word. How God Ends Us is an exploration through poetry of those terrifying and terrific aspects of life that may cause one to tremble, whether in fear, in beauty, or in love. While God is often present throughout the book, the collection is not simply a celebration of the God that Dameron proposes ends life so much as a searching meditation on the ways of ending and the nature of the human condition and mind as endings emerge into view.
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Possible Crocodiles
By Barry Marks   
Reviewed by Book Noted

From the publisher: Possible Crocodiles is Barry Marks’ first full-length poetry book. Marks is a Birmingham attorney whose poetry, fiction, articles and essays have been published in nearly 100 journals, magazines and periodicals over the last 30 years.
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Bear in Mind
By Anne Whitehouse   
Reviewed by Book Noted

From the publisher: “[Anne] Whitehouse crafts quietly elegant poems in which the seemingly simple surfaces contain striking profundities and deeply felt experience. These poems literally glow from within.” -John Vanderslice, Santa Fe Writers Project Journal
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Within the Shadow of a Man
By Dennis Sampson   
Reviewed by Russ Kesler

The poems in Dennis Sampson’s Within the Shadow of a Man often address big questions such as evil and injustice, as a few random titles might suggest: "Mysteries," "Naming the World," "Brotherly Love," and "Concerning the Suffering of Others.” These poems are more often interested in ideas than in things. And fittingly, the poems are structurally capacious, usually having long lines and sometimes running to four or five pages.

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To Stitch a Summer Sky
By Sue Scalf   
Reviewed by Book Noted

From the publisher: “In To Stitch a Summer Sky, Sue Scalf gifts the reader with poems that explore evanescence, our tender and tenuous relationship with time itself. ‘Nothing lasts / and each is alone.’ As ‘Autumn lengthens toward dark,’ these poems explore loss and endurance with precision and compassion. "
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