<p>Everything abandoned comes alive Pamela Yenser writes in <em>CLOSE ENCOUNTERS Down Home</em> which becomes an invocation for resilience in a world filled with disaster at every turn: whether it's the wreckage of flying saucers in Roswell or a brother and a mother who are irrevocably changed after a complicated birth or an abusive father who is always in the driver's seat-whether it's by plane or car. Yenser does the difficult work of reckoning with trauma and the family / history slamming the lid on truth. And though there's comfort in escape and beauty to be found in the landscapes these poems traverse in a wide range of traditional and open poetic forms Yenser reminds us As long as you live / you won't forget and there's danger everywhere. Lucky for us we have a wonderful guide who knows her way around language and line and is cunning enough to have razor blades sewn / into the hem of every poem. -<strong>Gary Jackson</strong></p><p><br></p><p>Pamela Yenser is a learned poet who knows the context history and texts of literature. Here she uses her supple and strict prosody to tell a family story about an abusive daredevil father a denying-praying mother her little retarded brother (She is her brother's keeper) and more. In airplanes and Airstream trailers one catastrophe after another happens to mark a childhood where Visions of the devil / made you tithe trade in the family silver. This astonishing chapbook delivers one revelation after another in poems exquisitely structured: The past is a trap the Jaws of Life / can't break she writes ... but isn't this the work a poet is meant to do? One poem in exact rhyming couplets is called In the Garden of Demented Parents. Another also in couplets ends: Look! I have razor blades sewn / into the hem of every poem. Read this brilliant and triumphant chapbook by a poet who limns the tragedy and triumph of her life. -<strong>Hilda Raz</strong></p><p><br></p><p>Pamela Yenser's brave and tender poems spin together family history personal resilience and imaginative perseverance sharp as that wreckage/ strewn like tinsel on glitter-/fields of tumbled rock (as she writes in the title poem). Encompassing everything from a bad weather balloon made of Kryptonite to a pineapple/ ruffled doily Yenser juxtaposes the images and dreams of the otherworldly and the day-to-day life while also writing deeply of love and survival monsters and angels magic tricks and memories. This is a captivating and sparkling collection. -<strong>Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg</strong></p><p><br></p><p>Pamela Yenser's <em>CLOSE ENCOUNTERS</em> refers to yes the Roswell UFO as well as family relationships that are a parallel encounter. The poems' narrator sees the flying saucer wreckage as a four-year-old. She writes about this iconic disruption of the skies as a way to reveal the workings of memory itself. This is an exciting personal fable that blends journalism verse and narration. -<strong>Denise Lowe</strong></p><p><br></p><p><br></p>
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