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The
Boys I Borrow Many of these
sensitive, clever poems are about navigating the new waters of a non traditional
family. The result is a cohesive, engaging collection in which a real
heroine persona explores the often challenging terrain of the domicile. In a world in
which people speak in clichés and platitudes, Heather Sellers's
stunning new collection of poems The Boys I Borrow, transcends
the quotidian events of our day. I've read novels that have not developed
relationships between people in marriage as well as this. In poems that
deftly insert lyric moments into narrative, she uncovers the nuances of
infertility, a new marriage and the changes in life before and after.
If you know anything about the difference between desire and love and
the realities that blur between them, if you've lived any life at all
you'll 'remember, you have lived this way, always hungry' for more. When you open
The Boys I Borrow, you won't find poems about angels or mythological
heroineswhat you'll find is life the way we live it, but more clearly
seen and deeply understood than the average human can easily bear. The
dramas in this book are the dramas of the lived life in the 21st centurywe
have trips to the fertility doctor, motorcycles rides to the Shangrai-La
Motel beneath a 'well hung, low slung' moon, stepsons whose 'tongues are
simple antennae' and who play Nintendo, need help with their homeworkin
short, all of our wonderfully banal and beautiful world rendered in painterly
precision and tender humor. This is a book that sustains. Praise for Drinking
Girls and Their Dresses: If you love
poetry you can see, smell, taste, hear, and feel, then you will love the
luscious poems in this collection. Heather Sellers's lines have the cadence
of a chant, and there is some serious voodoo going on here, some magic
incantations about being a girl, a woman, a human being in a scary, beautiful
world. |
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New
Issues Poetry & Prose, Western Michigan University, Dept. of English, |
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