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Today's poem is "In Discovery Park"
from A Boy with a Halo at the Farmer's Market

Codhill Press

Sonia Greenfield was born and raised in Peekskill, New York, and earned an MFA from the University of Washington and an MPW from the University of Southern California. Author of poetry chapbook Circus Gravitas (2014) and two-time Pushcart Prize nominee, her poems, essays, and fiction have appeared widely, including in 2010 Best American Poetry, The Antioch Review, The Bellevue Literary Review, Cimarron Review, Cream City Review, The Massachusetts Review, Meridian, and Rattle. She lives with her husband and son in Los Angeles, California, where she teaches writing at USC.

Books by Sonia Greenfield:

Other poems on the web by Sonia Greenfield:
"Corpse Flower"
"Sago, West Virginia"
Two poems
Five poems

Sonia Greenfield's Website.

Sonia Greenfield on Twitter.

About A Boy with a Halo at the Farmer's Market:

"Sonia Greenfield explores menace and loss so often, it's as if her poems are scarecrows to hold against the night. She likes the lyric and persona, likes telling us over and over again, we survive. A master of the unsettling image and moment, she's got a big imagination and an appetite for the complexity of our lives. 'We always bend / our fear into something more useful.' I don't know if we do, but Greenfield does. The poems in Boy with a Halo at the Farmer's Market are more than useful—they are beautiful, and demonstrate once more that art is our deepest response to the fragility of life."
—Bob Hicok

"Sonia Greenfield's vision is x-ray and technicolor at once. These are poems of tragedy and ecstasy, rendered in high music and beautiful and shocking imagery. It's rare to find a poem 'riveting,' but hers are poems that, once started, refuse to be left unread."
—Laura Kasischke

"In Sonia Greenfield's poems, we experience a mind busy with the work of description, and it is through that description—of people known and unknown, of lives on the edge of being unmade, or being sewn back up again—that Greenfield brings us to revelation. By looking at the surface of existence, and by narrating circumstances of particular people in particular places, Greenfield shows us how noticing matters, and how looking at the surface can illuminate the depths."
—Mark Wunderlich



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