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Today's poem is "The Dreaming Woman"
from Suspension

Terrapin Books

Paige Riehl is the author of Blood Ties, a poetry chapbook published by Finishing Line Press (2014). Her poetry has appeared in Crab Orchard Review, Water-Stone Review, Meridian, South Dakota Review, Nimrod International Journal, and elsewhere. She won the 2012-2013 Loft Mentor Series in Poetry in Minneapolis and the 2011 Literal Latte Prize for Poetry. She is the Poetry Editor for Midway Journal and an English faculty member at Anoka-Ramsey Community College. She lives in St. Paul, Minnesota.

Books by Paige Riehl:

Other poems on the web by Paige Riehl:
"In the Womb"
"Drink"
"Understand"
"Meeting An Old Lover"
"Apophasis"
"After Her Death"
"Wait"
"Things That Cannot Die"

Paige Riehl's Website.

Paige Riehl on Twitter.

About Suspension:

"Paige Riehl's poems explore constant and probing questions that arise with the crossing of thresholds. Whether exploring questions of motherhood, family, with whom one belongs, or whether the poem's speaker is an unfurled ribbon investigating the self, Riehl proceeds with elegance and certitude. As one's course in the world is shifted, she offers readers the grace notes to read such transitions with bewilderment and with the understanding of each new moment's possibility."
—Oliver de la Paz

"Suspension is that rare book of poetry, as much a narrative as a collection of individually successful lyrics. We follow here the extraordinary events of a life and the visions of the one/the many living it. We end, as in life, so far from where we began that a true sense of progress is made in the reading of this poetry, and yet we've lingered, meditated, listened, because this is work made mostly of imagery and music, subtlety and unflinching consideration. These are poems to return to again and again, written by a poet of unique powers."
—Laura Kasischke

"Though the book is called Suspension, there is no hesitation here in how Paige Riehl describes the complicated, outrageous, glorious, and grief-stricken world in which we all live. The subjects are varied--love, children, illness, travel--but the voice speaking the poems goes unfailingly to the challenges of our 21st-century western world. The poems often afford a resolution, no matter how momentary. There is rawness here as well as delight. Perhaps most telling, the book is a sustained meditation on love in its many guises. As such, it is a gift, and it is our luck as readers to be its recipients."
—Jim Moore



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