Elizabeth Macklin
You've Just Been Told
Poems
"These poems parse life's sentences . . . [they are] poems of abrupt perception and rigorous lyricism."New York Times Book Review
Elizabeth Macklin, whose poems have been described by The New Yorker as "graceful and halting, quartzlike in precision," contemplates the grammar of loss. Here, in Elizabeth Macklin's second collection, an only child's responses to the fait accompli of childhooddecisions already made, accidents of history and family, patterns presetcome to the adult mind in the presence of change and grief. The mind regroups as it can: "later light on the hills of houses / before us / just as they are, as versus none."
"[P]oems of abrupt perception and rigorous lyricism."New York Times Book Review
"I love Elizabeth Macklin's poems."Thomas Lux
"The joy and intelligence in these poems is simply tremendous."Tomaz Salamun, author of The Four Questions of Melancholy
"Mastery as well as mystery, and we are grateful for what we've just been told."Richard Howard
"Macklin the Magician does it again!....dazzling evocations."Marie Ponsot, author of The Bird Catcher
"[A]n exceedingly wise bookand joyful, too, though the joy is never glib or easy-won..."Bill McKibben
"Elizabeth Macklin talks to me, woman to woman, poet to poet. In listening to her, I am rewarded."Nina Cassian)
Elizabeth Macklin's awards include a Guggenheim Fellowship, an Ingram Merrill Foundation Prize, and an Amy Lowell Traveling Scholarship. She is the author of A Woman Kneeling in the Big City. She lives in New York City.
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