<p>In Ellen Kaufman&rsquo;s <em>House Music</em> which was a finalist for the 2012 Able Muse Book Award the everyday is remade into a luminous tapestry of intricate wordplay delightful sound effects and transcendent moments. Her observational skill about the commonplace is revelatory with fresh insights on such wide-ranging subjects as construction work native and exotic flora and fauna a sewing machine and a piano handed down through generations and a momentous visit to the doctor&rsquo;s office. <em>House Music</em> is a wonderful debut collection from a uniquely inspired poet.</p><p><b>PRAISE FOR HOUSE MUSIC:</b></p><p>Ellen Kaufman is a master of sight; her explorations encourage us to see the ordinary beauty in homely scenes. Equally important for any poet worth her salt she is also a master of sounds. She fills her poems with mouth-watering phrases like &ldquo;dollops/ and fillips of tulips&rdquo; and delicious appreciations of domestic details. Her sly and understated villanelle &ldquo;A Flemish Still Life&rdquo; epitomizes Kaufman&rsquo;s ars poetica as well as her observational skill. &ldquo;No effort&rsquo;s wasted if you aim to please&rdquo; it begins. It ends with the gentle command &ldquo;Aim to please.&rdquo; Kaufman and her poems aim to please and succeed in doing so.<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; -Willard Spiegelman </p><p>I've been reading Ellen Kaufman's poetry for many years now. There's no other experience quite like it. Her language is taut and her aim unerring: her poems fly straight and true. Part of this has to do with technical mastery. She is a virtuoso of meter and rhyme and her deep understanding of how structure works in a sonnet or a villanelle for example results in poems that combine pattern or repetition with an astonishingly singular vision.<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; -Jennifer Barber (from the foreword)</p><p>The intelligence behind Ellen Kaufman's wonderfully realized <em>House Music</em> is poised and observant its reflections unfolding in sinuous sentences that are effortlessly elegant and deceptively plainspoken. The subjects and themes of her poems are various-the family romance an encounter with a panhandler the first moon landing-often taking the form of enigmatic vignettes and fables like Sonatina and Thirteenth Night pervaded by a sense of the fragile contingency of life. <em>House Music</em> is a brilliant and powerful debut.<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; -John Koethe</p><p>Ellen Kaufman's distinguished poems achieve their purposes by modulating a powerful self-containment a powerful and wise human awareness by means of a chorus of exquisite and luxurious local effects. They are astonishing acts of balance intelligence precision eloquence vision imagination and grace.<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; -Vijay Seshadri</p><p><b>ABOUT THE AUTHOR:</b></p><p>Ellen Kaufman earned an A.B. in English and Asian Studies from Cornell University and M.S.L.S. and M.F.A. degrees from Columbia. Her poems have appeared in <em>Beloit Poetry Journal Carolina Quarterly The New Yorker Poetry Northwest Pool Salamander Seneca Review Shenandoah Southwest Review Tar River Poetry Think Journal</em> and <em>Verse.</em> She has reviewed poetry for <em>Library Journal</em> since 1991. She was a 2009 MacDowell Colony Fellow and won the <em>Southwest Review</em>&rsquo;s 2012 Morton Marr Poetry Prize. <em>House Music</em> was a finalist for the 2012 Able Muse Book Award. <br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The mother of two grown sons Kaufman lives with her husband in New York City where she has worked as a law librarian and as a reference librarian for Baruch College. </p>
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