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Jeff Grinnell
Author
Flickering Kingdoms
The poems here evoke our recent moral, spiritual, economic and political malaise by presenting characters from many stations in this divided country, characters who speak their minds, sometimes implying more than they realize. These richly rhythmic chants and songs burst with compact and precisely articulated observations and convictions, often counterbalanced with irony and double meanings. As a Kirkus reviewer enthused about the poems in Flickering Kingdoms: “Alive, inspired verses from a poet with ample and accomplished range.”
Reviews
Kirkus Reviews

Grinnell's debut poetry collection ranges far and wide--history poems collide with the blues, elegy provokes eulogy, and narrative breaks into lyric. The book's organization into just four numbered sections belies the largesse of its contents... Their detail is a strong suit ... dialogue encrusts the lines, and engaging diction embroiders them. This is not to say the poems are all surface and no heart, as deep subjects lurk underneath the display. "The Down-home Harrower," for example, opens with its speaker's confessional crankiness: "My whole life I've been sort of shaky-like most warm afterglows / but hard as a freezing fool can be, understand--way deep-- /nobody your crowd would care to surround with its wineglass / chitchat..." The straining syntax and dialectlike diction create a voice worth listening to--one that can tell readers something about love and threat. Although the majority of the poems take people as their subjects, the poet depicts landscapes, too.... The haunting"Vapor Waltz" includes the cosmos in its mourning song: "With no time left, my love, / whole galaxies have fled. / With no time left in your eyes-- / come glide from your cooling bed!" These poems search out the powers that "erupt each night / in stars, insights, and cornered crowds." Alive, inspired verses from a poet with ample and accomplished range.

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