Poetry, Art
41 American poets respond to drawings by Slovene Artist Metka Krasovec that are themselves responses to Emily Dickinson lines.
 
Poetry
Poems sent as responses to each other over the course of a year
 
THE TRAIL
When do you realize the selves you left behind 
have gone on without you, living the many lives
you now begin to resemble? So the day hesitates
as if caught in headlights. So the words you write 
seem like nonsense someone left on your desk.
The trees pretend to be listening. The owl cares less
who you are. If you are lucky there’s a single word
you can take refuge behind. It seems there is 
something happening of great importance but
the heart’s trail guide herself is lost. Almost invisible,
the ants carry bits of leaf twice their weight
back to the nest. The warning squirrels won’t stop
warning. Then you see that what you have written 
are wrong directions, scribbled in a language
of condolences, but  unable to apologize,  missing 
the pronouns, missing a destination, missing yourself.
 
Very brief description goes here
 
Isn't everything and everyone from a place they are no longer at, that is, out of place?
 
January 2010, Ashland Poetry Press. Cover by Metka Krasovec, Slovenia.
 
Puddinghouse Chapbook, 2004
 
Ashland U Press, Ohio, 2003
 
Juniper Prize Winning Book from UMass Press, 2000
 
Sonnets and a Canzone based on Petrarch's Rime Sparse
 
Translations of Jackson's poems into Slovene
 
hand sewn and printed, Flagpond Press, 2002
 
Limited Edition, Aureole Press, 1999, Pterarchan Poems
 
Cleveland State University Press, 1992
 
U of Alabama Press Prize Winner
 
Poetry Translation
Translated with Susan Thomas and Deborah Brown
 
Translation of book of poems by Alexsander Persolja
Anthology
50 Slovene Poets, facing Slovene
 
Aleph Press, Ljubljana, 1993
 
Interviews
30 Interviews, U of Alabama Press, 1983 Choice Award
 
Essays
Philosophical essays on 6 poets, U of Alabama Press, 1987 Agee Award