Book Review: Thank the Sweet Waters
THANK THE SWEET WATERS by Lucille May is a rich and multilayered examination of love’s blossoming, revealed through insightful poetry. Reviewed by Amy Brozio-Andrews.
THANK THE SWEET WATERS by Lucille May is a rich and multilayered examination of love’s blossoming, revealed through insightful poetry. Reviewed by Amy Brozio-Andrews.
RITES OF PASSAGE by Mel Kenne is a fearless look into an unforgiving mirror—a collection of intensely personal poetry cooled by objective reflection. Reviewed by Nikolas Mavreas.
BLOODLETTING A BUTTERFLY by Alec B. Hood is visceral, devastating, and brilliantly gory. Reviewed by Mandy Bach.
Sweetly optimistic and structurally succinct, N.E. Wright’s Poetic Help is a collection of inspirational poetry peppered with illustrations.
The Other Revival by Salaam Green is a healing collection that remembers and projects the voices of a small community. Reviewed by Nikolas Mavreas.
ODE TO WOMEN by Silver Phoenix is a celebration of love, empathy, and the strength found within women. Reviewed by Jadidsa Perez.
Everyone’s Going: Poems on Grief and Mortality by George H. Northrup is a collection of healing laments about loss and grief presented in dazzling verse.
DREAMING OF NORTH BEACH (FROM CORPORATE AMERICA) by Deno Gell is a striking collection about a speaker lost in the hollowing world of corporate America.
BOOKENDS OF LIFE by Sonja Koch and Dalys Finzgar is a spirited and affectionate call to meaningful living through empathy and attention to nature.
American Entropy by Travis Hupp is both a seething criticism of the American political climate and a compelling argument for interpersonal closeness. Reviewed by Mandy Bach.










