Today's poem is "Pet Crow"
from Winter Here
Jessica Tanck
is the author of Winter Here (UGA Press, 2024), winner of the Georgia Poetry Prize. Her work appears in Alaska Quarterly Review, Beloit Poetry Journal, Colorado Review, DIAGRAM, Gulf Coast, and Kenyon Review, among others. Jess lives and writes in Salt Lake City, where she is a Ph.D. candidate in English Literature and Creative Writing at the University of Utah.
Other poems by Jessica Tanck in Verse Daily:
Other poems on the web by Jessica Tanck:
Jessica Tanck's Website.
About Winter Here:
"Jessica Tanck's Winter Here is a deeply visceral and refreshingly unflinching collection. These poems do not shy away from hard truths as they deal with the specter of childhood and eventual coming of age through the lens of the death of an ineffectual mother and the lack of faith in adults and adulthood. These poems are set in a world that does not come with a set of instructions to guide useverything comes into questionlove, relationships, religion, and most important, memory and our oftentimes tenuous relationship with it. Tanck's poems will grab you by the collar and will not let you go, and you'll be glad for it."
"In Winter Here, Jessica Tanck explores home and all its shadows. From the magic hour of early morning and the ways secrets still make a sound to ads and reviews from the darknet, Tanck shows us two ways of seeing the world and also the reasons to look away. These poems wrestle with God and music, with cold darknesses and a fire we can walk through. They remind us of all the ways there are to be haunted and all the gifts of tenderness we still try to offer."
"The darkness, as some know too well, transforms us. Pupils expand, trying to absorb any possible light. Touch and hearing sharpen. No surprise, then, the synesthesia that sparks up in Jessica Tanck's Winter Here, where the cold is 'a song like white noise, crackling / a throb down the spine of all I want, feel, or touch.' Where 'the air was a hand / that closed over / my mouth.' We get Tanck's ravenous imagination and mind thrown, remarkably, against the dark walls of ardor, little leaps of flame that provide light and warmth, but also remind that we can always be singed. Readers are lucky to catch a glimpse, in these poems, of such painful, such radiant light. It may be winter here, but, as Tanck reminds us, 'the cold / herds you to wherever there's heat.' Let yourself be herded by this stunning book"
"These are poems aware of our capacity for violence—the violence we do to ourselves, to each other, the violence that is memory itself. Even our most tender actswhether we're making art or offering someone consolationcome laced with threat. And yet 'How better to love one another,' Tanck asks, than when we tend to each other's wounds? It's a painful paradox to admit: our shared injuries pull us apart and also bring us together in the terrible territory that is love, in which we are both victim and aggressor, healer and sufferer, parent and child, ghost and body; where we cannot help giving into our desires, no matter how much they hurt. 'I am giving you a gift,' Tanck writes, 'I do not know how to take [it] back.'"
February 26, 2024: "So Below" "I can walk through fire, I told my mother, drunk..."
November 20, 2023: "Samson et Dalila, Op. 47" by Jessica Tanck
"I would wonder over it often: the welt..."
Two poems
Two poems
"Morning Sickness"
"Eating Flamin' Hot Cheetos at Mom's Grave"
"Long Division"
Travis Denton
Traci Brimhall
Corey Van Landingham
Paisley Rekdal
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