distributed by UPNE



How the Crimes Happened
Dawn Potter

Not in stock or not yet published
Expected: March 2010
Notable Voices
Cavankerry Press
2010 • 78 pp. 6 x 9 1/4"
Poetry

$16.00 Paper, 978-1-933880-17-4


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Whether they’re graveside tourists in Rome or lovelorn girls on a bus, the characters in Dawn Potter’s ravishing second collection of poetry, “betray a fatal longing” for love’s complications. By turns comic and melancholy, hungry and euphoric, these poems surrender again and again to the passions and panics of experience.

Endorsements:

“John Keats might have been writing to Dawn Potter when he said, ‘There is nothing stable in the world; uproar’s your only music.’…these poems tackle the commotion of life: flip-flopping love (constant only in its thorny complications); glorious yet ignoble parenthood; and pitiless death, robbing us of our finest poets and closest friends…”—Meg Kearney

“This poet’s relationship to language is nearly physical in its intensity. Fearless and headlong, these poems sing in service to love, loss, and hope… a poem in memory of a dead friend recounts the list of things they had planned to get done: ‘sing like angels on moonshine, like fire, like sin.’ And she does.”—Ellen Dudley


DAWN POTTER is associate director of the Frost Place Conference on Poetry and Teaching. Her most recent book is a memoir, Tracing Paradise: Two Years in Harmony with John Milton (University of Massachusetts Press, 2009). She lives in Harmony, Maine, with photographer Thomas Birtwistle and their two sons.






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Wed, 3 Feb 2010 17:12:36 -0500