Today's poem is "Yield"
from Insomnia in Another Town
Lisa M. Hase-Jackson
is author of Insomnia in Another Town (Clemson University Press 2024), and Flint and Fire (The Word Works 2019). Her poems appear or are forthcoming in Sugar House Review, Chiron Review, and Cimarron Review. She is a Visiting Assistant Professor in Creative Writing at the University of Pittsburgh.
Other poems on the web by Lisa M. Hase-Jackson:
"Cesar Chavez"
Lisa M. Hase-Jackson's Website.
About Insomnia in Another Town:
"Insomnia in Another Town is a peripatetic exploration of place and displacement; animal life and strange weathers; the exigencies of race, class, and gender as childhood memories emit a dark radiance by which to navigate the present. These poems are quietly perceptive, unflinching: 'There is no small grief. . . / for all are / interconnected. One touch / sends tremors through our core / like the fly in the web / that wakes the spider at its center.' Nevertheless, there's significant courage here with grace notes of buoyancy as readers are reawakened to 'joy in bird song along the power lines / and between the tunes / on the radio, / the interstices / of thoughts / no one thinks about.'"
"Insomnia in Another Town is a remarkable meditation about memory, mother-daughter relationships, and the opaque nature of family history, whether in the form of rumor, hearsay, or as one poem's narrator puts it, 'I've heard it both ways.' With profound clarity and tenderness, Hase-Jackson blends elegy, pop culture, and our fears around dying as a way to explore an array of human experiences, such as when 'being broke felt more like being poor,' alongside the everyday miracles of how 'luck becomes blooms becomes beans,' ultimately revealing what can and cannot be mended."
"From the opening poem of Lisa Hase-Jackson's impactful collection, Insomnia in Another Town, we learn that 'There is no small grief. . .all are interconnected.' These poems, cloaked in memory and the unmaking and re-making of family, travel us through the harvest of a poet's life. Like the farms she made grow, this book tills the soil of a human soul and all the many experiences that make it. In pantoums, free verse, and prose poems, Hase-Jackson demonstrates the way that every lived experience weaves into a root system that bears unique fruit, singular as our heartbeats, our winding fingerprints."
Claire Bateman
Esther Lee
Ashley M. Jones
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