Love is always complicated. In the poems of Drug and Disease Free, Michael Broder ponders the fur...
Luminous, whimsical, and heartbreakingly tender by turns, the poems in Lisa Andrews's Dear Liz ar...
Joseph Osmundson is a scientist and writer from rural Washington State. His writing has been publ...
In one of the most important of the Aztec festivals, a month of fasting was ended by observers of...
Sarah Sarai's Geographies of Soul and Taffeta takes place in a universe where the real and the un...
When can you tell a book of poems is really working? For me, it's when the poems provide revoluti...
Reading Was Body provided a jolt I didn't realize I needed. Using tropes of iteration and erasure...
Joseph O. Legaspi writes, 'How do languages speak to each other? Through poetry, of course, and T...
These poems grapple with how romantic relationships, both gay and straight, are defined-and what ...
In Safe Danger, here comes a Stephen Zerance poem sashaying down the street: snakeskin tights, cl...
This Someone I Call Stranger, by James Diaz, is absolutely transcendent. Diaz's evocative and cou...
'We take our pleasure as we can,' Karen Hildebrand writes in the title poem to Crossing Pleasure ...