Someone Reading a Book Is a Sign of Order in the World by Mary Ruefle

In the 2001 Kentucky Derby, which I watched live on television, Keats ran against Invisible Ink. There was no way I was going to miss this race. But I waited in vain for one of the sportscasters to mention that Keats was an English poet whose only surviving descendants must live in Kentucky, where his older brother had immigrated, remained healthy, and
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—Sharon Bryan and William Olsen, from Planet on the Table: Poets on the Reading Life

RALPH declares Eleanor Lerman's Our Post-Soviet History Unfolds one of the best poetry books of the last fifteen years.

Eleanor Lerman's poetry is back on The Writer's Almanac! Check out "The City, Berobed in Blue" from The Sensual World Re-emerges.

Kiki Petrosino's Fort Red Border is on Justin Taylor's summer reading list at the Poetry Foundation and The Huffington Post.

09-22-2010
You Have Given Me a Country

6:30 p.m. Southeast Anchor Library 3601 Eastern Avenue Baltimore, MD 21224

Cindy Kleback
410-396-1580
http://www.prattlibrary.org/

You Have Given Me a Country
by Neela Vaswani

You Have Given Me a Country is a mixed-genre exploration of blurred borders, identity, and what it means to be bicultural. Combining memoi ... [read more]

The Available World
by Ander Monson

In The Available World, poet Ander Monson parses, sings, and sifts his way through the abundant offerings of the modern, digital world. Th ... [read more]

Post Moxie
by Julia Story

Julia Story's Post Moxie documents the half-measures and approximations, the metaphorical conceits we use to tell the stories of our lives ... [read more]

The Sensual World Re-emerges
by Eleanor Lerman

In The Sensual World Re-emerges, Eleanor Lerman’s fifth collection of poetry, she circles back to the themes that began her career at ag ... [read more]

The Name of the Nearest River
by Alex Taylor

Like a room soaked in the scent of whiskey, perfume, and sweat, Alex Taylor's America is at once intoxicating, vulnerable, and full of brawn. The s ... [read more]

Orange Crush
by Simone Muench

In the seventeenth century, the closest a woman ever got to a theater was just outside the door, selling sweet "china" oranges at sixpence each—o ... [read more]

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