Today's poem is "Morenci Arizona"
from Bully Love
Patricia Colleen Murphy
is the founder of Superstition Review
at Arizona State University, where she teaches creative writing
and magazine production. Her collection Hemming Flames
(Utah State University Press) won the 2016 May Swenson
Poetry Award, judged by Stephen Dunn, and the 2017 Milt
Kessler Poetry Award. A chapter from her memoir-in-progress
was published as a chapbook by New Orleans Review. Her
writing has appeared in many literary journals, including The
Iowa Review, Quarterly West, and American Poetry Review,
and has received awards from Gulf Coast and Bellevue Literary
Review, among others. She lives in Phoenix, Arizona.
Books by Patricia Colleen Murphy:
Other poems on the web by Patricia Colleen Murphy:
"How I Almost Died in Peru"
"Cibophobia"
"Jet Lag"
"Dad's Last Entrechat"
Patricia Colleen Murphy's Website.
Patricia Colleen Murphy According to Wikipedia.
Patricia Colleen Murphy on Twitter.
About Bully Love:
"In this quietly fierce collection of poems, the dynamic between profound longing and clear-eyed testament is palpable everywhere. 'And so I will live the rest of my life / just short of rapture,' suggests one line, but the whole collection is mapped in that instant. And in this world, all things are complicit: the landscape'From our windows windmills are obedient fan palms'and the animals'the Dean Martin of mourning doves'themselves also necessary characters in these striking life-tellings. Bridging a young view of Ohio with an older eye toward Arizona, these poems search for, if not understanding, redemptive acceptance."
"The austerity of the desert is almost a character in Bully Love, almost a beloved. In leaving the Midwest, a mother's madness, a family's dissolution, the poet travels west mythically and actually. 'It is easy to be pious when/your life is not on fire' simultaneously invokes human suffering and suggests that faith of any kindin love or place or Godcannot be gained without it. For some, a desert is a place of baptism: the difficulty of existence clarifies its worth. You don't need to think of the desert as a place to be rebornPatricia Murphy has done that for you."
"My only power is the ability to name,' one speaker in Patricia Murphy's new collection, Bully Love, states, but as Murphy richly explores, the power derived from that abilityafter all, the power of the poetis both potent and partial. 'What's that?' another speaker asks, hearing a birdsong she can't identify on a hike. 'Olive warbler? Painted orangestart? Scissor-tailed flycatcher?' Names are invoked like spells to tell the future, wards to face the ghosts of the past. There's wondrous courage conjured in these crystalline poems, which sparkle with Murphy's verve, enabling her to confront the hard truth she names: not love but bully love, the effects of which she exorcises in the glorious music of this edgy, dazzlingly sharp-witted and necessary book."
"'It's a great leisure / knowing just where to put one's self,' Patricia Colleen Murphy observes in Bully Love. I would add that it's a great skill of hers too, and she proves it on every page. These poems are stark yet rich in tantalizing, often heartbreaking personal details that Murphy reveals with candor and a slyly gracious sense of humor that enchants and disarms. Whether they've played out between herself and a parent or a partner or a landscape, the dramas she refers to hereboth small and large, recent and distantleave us with an uneasy kind of consolation: 'Now there are several things besides love."
Alberto Rios
Bob Hicok
Cynthia Hogue
Mark Bibbins
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