<p>The poems in Kenneth Pobo&#39;s&nbsp;<em>Loplop in a Red City</em> spring from artworks old and new figurative to abstract Vincent Van Gogh to&nbsp;Leonora Carrington to Max Ernst. Like those&nbsp;works the poems in Loplop are agonized and idyllic uneasily at home in the surreal animated beautiful and complex.</p><p><strong>Praise for <em>Loplop in a Red City:</em></strong></p><p>Not only does Pobo&rsquo;s work lead me to visualize new works of art &hellip; but it also gives me works that are known in a new way. &mdash; <em>Eclectica</em></p><p>Pobo sees art as intricately tied to life. This notion pulsates throughout the collection. &mdash; <em>Compulsive Reader</em></p><p>These wonderful poems go way beyond mere ekphrasis.&nbsp; They&#39;re little masterpieces in their own right bursting with exuberant life from the page and into our memories without our having to know anything about the paintings that inspired them. - Robert Cooperman author of&nbsp;<em>In the Colorado Gold Fever Mountains</em> winner of the Colorado Book Award for Poetry</p><p>There&#39;s no ego here; it&#39;s laid bare without any ribbons or bows and in that simplicity somehow more complex than most.... Pobo&#39;s talents for finding the right words his precision as an artist sing from the canvas in this collection.&nbsp;- Jerrod Edson author of&nbsp;<em>The Moon Is Real</em></p><p><em>Loplop in a Red City</em> offers us a taste of super powers:&nbsp;Pobo&#39;s&nbsp;poems present lyrical verbal play and we also gain new insight into art art history and the painters who created the great works.... Pobo&#39;s poems will provide artistic companionship in the days and years ahead. -&nbsp;Marilyn Kallet author of <em>The Love That Moves Me</em></p><p>&nbsp;</p>