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Today's poem is "Sleight of Hand"
from Landscape With Missing River

Barrow Street Press

Joni Wallace's third full-length poetry collection is Landscape with Missing River (Barrow Street Press, 2023), winner of the 2023 AZ-NM Book Award for Poetry. Her honors include Four Way Books' Levis Prize for her second collection, Blinking Ephemeral Valentine, and fellowships from the Arizona Commission on the Arts and the Baltic Writing Residency.

Other poems by Joni Wallace in Verse Daily:
February 6, 2017:   "Exposure with Owls" "Soft piping of an owl, two owlets, in the pine...."
January 27, 2011:   "Valentine with broken birds" "Enclosed find pieces of the starling flown flat..."
January 19, 2011:   "Valentine with saints and sharps" "There's not much to do..."

Books by Alison Stone:

Other poems on the web by Joni Wallace:
"Red and Blue Planets"
Two poems
"One of a Series"
"Snow Globe With Frank O’Hara and Arboretum"
"Errata"

Joni Wallace's Website.

Joni Wallace on Twitter.

About Landscape With Missing River:

'Joni Wallace's elegiac Landscape with Missing River is as sonically rich as it is lyrically alert. Insects 'scrape and chew' in the 'mandible grass.' 'Grasshoppers rasp a too-bright opus.' A wildfire smolders into 'notes of a fugue.' Toads 'sound out a mercy chorus.' Landscapes shimmer with details chiseled to the essence of mourning: 'Sleet comes, a shroud in verglas, ice / slivers falling // on fences, the clothesline. You are dead.' Grief for the dying father, who in one haunting poem 'sees the end of seeing,' glosses these spare poems with grace. This exquisite collection is utterly mesmerizing."
—Cynthia Hogue

"In one of the first poems of Landscape with Missing River, Joni Wallace writes, 'Look how the dead gather themselves / inside a landscape.' And so begins her series of exquisitely rendered elegies about Northern New Mexico where Wallace's father, a scientist at Los Alamos and an outdoorsman lived and died. In these poems, Wallace's father is gathered by her careful attention to his severe, stunning spaces, where, the poet says, 'I spend a day there, listening. // I spend forever there, listening' and we believe her. How else could she write so precisely, beautifully about 'April as an anvil' or 'the sibilant trees'? In 'The Air is Filled with Robots,' imagination pleasingly renovates the porch of her childhood home and then Wallace disintegrates it, catching herself in a lie. She offers us '[i]nstead, the wordless, grief-edged, / of erasure.' The poet enters New Mexico to see her father—through 'a tunnel of Aspens' quaking and towards yellow jackets that 'shiver out / from paper tombs.' Wallace's poems offer us the natural world's consolations, which are that the land has little and everything to do with human grief. Landscape with Missing River is a must-read book for all of us haunted."
—Connie Voisine

"In Landscape with Missing River, Joni Wallace shapes loss out of images derived from the natural world: love is a small rabbit held against the chest, absence is the air captured in a net, and grief is a fox drowning in a river. Here we have buzzards and rats, tadpoles and trout, and a wolf as a stand-in for a dead father. In these poems, Wallace reminds us that memory is nothing more than a narrow river where we can 'spend forever' by its edge, waiting to hear back from those we grieve for. A beautiful read."
—Octavio Quintanilla



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