Reviews
of Mutual Shores
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The poems of Mutual Shores
are delivered by one voice, but that voice has the tenor of many. Sterling is
a poet straightforward in language and tone yet charmingly deceitful in subjecthe
draws an idea from the natural world then nurtures it, watches it grow. What
results is a furthering of the human experience, a relativity that makes random
the Chain of Being and leaves us where 'the rain evokes / no patron saint' and
only a small green lizard / offers hope.' Sterling, from him singular vantage
point somewhere between the ground and the sky, says to us all This is what
you should have seen.
"A beautiful lyricism radiates through the elegant poems of Phillip Sterling's
debut collection, like he patterns of stained glass in Notre Dame's rose Windowpoems
that view both 'the earthy smell of light rain / clipping its early wings on
glass' and 'some human smell, some sweat / diffused like light' ('A Certain
Slant') . . . Sterling's is a right, new voice."
Cynthia Hogue
"Richly quiet and intelligent, these multi-layered, well-crafted poems
might tempt us to see them as contemplation perfectly restrainedbut
for the rumble, the earth shift, discernible and coming, underneath."
Alice Friman
Sterlings best quality as an observer is a persistent romanticism that allows him to see beauty in a ordinary lawn chair, its tubing and taut straps host[ing] levels of light.
Vince Gotera, North American Review