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About The Book
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Book Description I. AMONG OTHERS Marie Reilly's third collection of poems considers the bittersweet collision of memory of long-held relationships with a life engaged in forming new ones. II. The pleasurable creativity in events that offer the company of women forms the basis of the first segment titled One Among Others. Reed/s One reed and others -hollow one and all- in shallow waters flourish. In shallows refresh in sun enliven as warmlight throbs and fills the hollows. One by one they give up their song to the winds. Oh listen! In Yearning the author responds to a sense of aging and the promise in a late-life aspiration to write poetry. On the Wing Birds in flight from snow and Anglos: The sky grays as now they every last mountain climb and night draws nigh. Oh aspire to wildness in stance in running on bike and rock and ice¯ scale heights. Pack a rucksack with desire cut fresh trails through the days and through every remaining field and stream. The third segment Confession addresses the greatest consequence of her move to the southwest-the loosened ties to long-held and very dear friendships. Fidelity Who crave me still accept the substitute a reconfigured me. In me in my ruminations they find expression of sustenance in a late-life diet of writing: a nourishment taken with the caress of late autumn breeze a late-life diet at early winter. Blessed so my shoulders my arm my hand my pen relax in their late-autumn and transform the time. Oh the carter's truck asserts itself. Shoulder arm hand pen tense to transform its unmistakable roar. Who crave a letter from me amid that volcanic rumble must accept the replacement now. In Around the Rectangular Table the poet returns to the seductive character in local scenes. With Estela- -I ignored the old town the dirty earth the rutted road but not the dumpsters sporting painted morning glories. A mongrel gaped we paused he turned away and disabused us of our fears. I cheered Estela as she plucked a pomegranate the plumpest one. The sun wrapped itself around our shoulders. And with Estela I remembered dear ones. I remembered a mother and a father too with Estela- She dares to proclaim herself a poet and to commit to a writing life in In Full View. Face of a Woman Writer Grayed eyes silvered hair face marked by indelible sun: she embraces all or none- or one. She is a book and you are welcome to read the strange matters. Her gaze reflects the time she looks like no need (now) for guile. Face it: pink mottled age-spotted slack. Writer author mother's daughter: Pen to page she does not stop she plies the trade until it paperbacks. The author cares yet ten years later on bright and breezy days in a southwest desert she hangs her head too determined to be the writer she is to be the friend she was. Two other events of great moment stir her soul and form the basis for the final two segments. Mother in memoriam is a meditation on loss and In Love celebrates the poet's marriage. Autobiography II When I was a child I sang to myself in a room that was my own room all alone. When my mother drew me to her side on the sofa I learned to sing close harmony. If anyone was asking for a wee mother's helper Pick me I sang. I am a big girl. And here I am the girl who's lost her mother keening mournful songs. Desolate! Changing Places I've changed my place in life at last to be at my love's side to hold him dear at mine. as at a shore face to face with a vast immutable force the ever-changing sea I do not fear its mysterious music to hear. III. As in Marie Reilly's two previous collections each poem in AMONG OTHERS - there are 77 in all - sits on the page to be enjoyed in and of itself. But the poet presents an additional