Description:"Nothing lived, grew, or moved. Nothing leftor arrived."-- Alex Everette"Your trial: a dimly lit stage set, an accuser, a foil. Long shadowfalls in slant across the kitchen's buttered light. The filling, the healing." -- Frances Boyle"gingko trees are older than the dinosaursroommate said, and leftanother leaf on the kitchen table."-- Juliana Rupchan"I watched two men drag a deer by its antlers, its organs left behindfor the wild animals to eat"-- Kristin LaFollette"when we drive the ravine rushes byyou sound lost feel lost are lost inyour red flannel your levis your doc martens"-- Katy DeCoste"Today, I feel like the blue orchard bee. I nest in the ground, in holes I stumble upon."-- Erin Emily Ann Vance-----------------------Volume one of small poems for the masses introduces six poems by six poets in a beautiful, full-colour micro-format. These poems converse with each other -- thinking about transformation, translation, and transportation, be it geographical, emotional, or spiritual. What does it mean to love someone, to let yourself be loved? What does it mean to trap, to be trapped, to escape? What omens does the present hold for the future? What community can we build with quiet strength and quiet words?This volume includes six poems: "Ghost Year" by Alex Everette, "The Snow Might Heal" by Frances Boyle, "talisman" by Juliana Rupchan, "Archer" by Kristin LaFollette, "athena" by Katy DeCoste, and "Urban Beekeeping" by Erin Emily Ann Vance. This is a full-colour, folded, eight-page labour of love. Hand-numbered editions /100. Measuring approximately 4" tall and 3" wide.We have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with small poems for the masses, volume one. To get started finding small poems for the masses, volume one, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed. Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.
Description: "Nothing lived, grew, or moved. Nothing leftor arrived."-- Alex Everette"Your trial: a dimly lit stage set, an accuser, a foil. Long shadowfalls in slant across the kitchen's buttered light. The filling, the healing." -- Frances Boyle"gingko trees are older than the dinosaursroommate said, and leftanother leaf on the kitchen table."-- Juliana Rupchan"I watched two men drag a deer by its antlers, its organs left behindfor the wild animals to eat"-- Kristin LaFollette"when we drive the ravine rushes byyou sound lost feel lost are lost inyour red flannel your levis your doc martens"-- Katy DeCoste"Today, I feel like the blue orchard bee. I nest in the ground, in holes I stumble upon."-- Erin Emily Ann Vance-----------------------Volume one of small poems for the masses introduces six poems by six poets in a beautiful, full-colour micro-format. These poems converse with each other -- thinking about transformation, translation, and transportation, be it geographical, emotional, or spiritual. What does it mean to love someone, to let yourself be loved? What does it mean to trap, to be trapped, to escape? What omens does the present hold for the future? What community can we build with quiet strength and quiet words?This volume includes six poems: "Ghost Year" by Alex Everette, "The Snow Might Heal" by Frances Boyle, "talisman" by Juliana Rupchan, "Archer" by Kristin LaFollette, "athena" by Katy DeCoste, and "Urban Beekeeping" by Erin Emily Ann Vance. This is a full-colour, folded, eight-page labour of love. Hand-numbered editions /100. Measuring approximately 4" tall and 3" wide.We have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with small poems for the masses, volume one. To get started finding small poems for the masses, volume one, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed. Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.