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Today's poem is "Self-Portrait as Dewclaw"
from Dogged

University of Massachusetts Press

Stacy Gnall is the author of the poetry collections Dogged (winner of the Juniper Prize for Poetry from The University of Massachusetts Press, 2022) and Heart First into the Forest (Alice James Books, 2011). A finalist for the Georgia Poetry Prize, her work has appeared in numerous journals, most recently Pleiades, Massachusetts Review, Bennington Review, and New American Writing. Gnall holds a Ph.D. in Creative Writing and Literature from the University of Southern California, and is also a graduate of the University of Alabama's MFA program in Creative Writing and Sarah Lawrence College. Originally from Cleveland, Ohio, she is currently Poet-in-Residence at the University of Detroit Mercy.

Books by Stacy Gnall:

Other poems on the web by Stacy Gnall:
"Self-portrait as Thousandfurs"
"Transformation Sequence"
"Trespass"

Stacy Gnall's Website.

About Dogged:

"Gnall intertwines with, and submerges her voice in the voices of the animal so thoroughly that it is deliberately and wonderfully difficult to tease one from the other. An eloquent imagination informs every page of Dogged, in which the exploration of otherness is moving, enlarging, and surprising in a way very few books are."
—Lynn Emanuel

"Stacy Gnall realizes and then exercises the only authority upon which we can sanely rely: the authority of tenderness and, more specifically, of tenderness towards all life, all matter, and all moving substance. Not since Marianne Moore has an American poet given voice to the thrum and thrill of the creaturely, to the motives and meanings of creation in its poignant complexity, with such unguarded candor. With Dogged, Gnall shows herself to be an indispensable poet, and we can only be grateful."
—Donald Revell

"Dogged rhymes its way toward our animal being, searching our world for humanity, empathy, and compassion. The experiences of dogs and cats, a swan, a fawn, birds, tigers, bulls, and wolves are intimate, deeply emotional, and compel us toward self-examination. At once dispirited and elegant, resigned and passionate, these poems, animals, and memories are rhyming creatures with ‘symmetry,' though ours can be only partial, ‘inky half-symmetry.'"
—Arda Collins

"There is so much pleasure in the word-handling in this book that you can almost feel good about feeling so badly about what time will inevitably do to us. Time requires a long view; Gnall reminds us how in stories there are characters ‘introduced / to be killed off immediately,' and I shudder in the immediacy of recognizing myself in that story. Dogged is beautiful, terrifying, gentle, and brutal, as all the most powerful writing is."
—Dara Wier



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