Author: Mom Egg Review

Review by Michele Sharpe Cleave is a poetry collection of magnitude and fascination, spanning continents, history, and personal obsessions. I started reading it one evening after dinner and stayed up late with it, still reading. As poet Gabrielle Calvocoressi notes on the publisher’s page, “With breathtaking lyric beauty and formidable formal range, Nobile details the intimate effects of the international adoption industrial complex on children and parents caught up in a system’s unrelenting hunger. This is a book of remarkable compassion and real horror. Its stories will be news to many and all too familiar to others.” Most, perhaps all,…

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Please join us at our online launch party for MER 19! Sunday, May 2, 3:00 PM to 7:00PM Free and open to the public. FREE Tickets via Eventbrite; you will be sent a link to access the event. Get the print issue (use coupon code COMMUNITY for $3 off!). Get a PDF copy (just $5!). Your Hosts: Marjorie Tesser, Jennifer Martelli, Cindy Veach Readers: NEA Big Read is a program of the National Endowment for the Arts in partnership with Arts Midwest.

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Procreate Project, the Museum of Motherhood and the Mom Egg Review are pleased to announce the 45th edition of this scholarly discourse. Literature intersects with art to explore the wonder and the challenges of motherhood. Using words and art to connect new pathways between the academic, the para-academic, the digital and the real, as well as the everyday: wherever you live, work and play, the Art of Motherhood is made manifest. #JoinMAMA #artandmotherhood April 2021: Art and words by Rubiane Maia For the last three years, I have been investigating the concept of memory and its resonances in our way…

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Review by Alison Meyers Fiercely lyrical is the phrase that comes to mind when I consider the whole of Kathy Engel’s The Lost Brother Alphabet, a multi-layered poetry collection as elegiac and intimate as it is politically urgent, as temporal and rooted as it is ontological. While again and again seeking to encompass a brother’s suicide and a beloved father’s death, the poems, themselves, are uncontained, exhibiting a formal inventiveness and restless intelligence that upend the usual equations. A colleague recently shared that reading Martin Buber’s I and Thou renewed his appreciation of Jorie Graham’s oeuvre. It is precisely this…

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Review by Celia Jeffries Although there are two O’s in Oona, the title of Alice Lyons’ extraordinary debut novel, that vowel never appears within the pages of the book itself. It’s a testament to Lyons’ talent that this reader did not notice the missing letter until its absence was pointed out by another. Lyons is a poet and painter, born in America but living by choice within range of Ben Bulben, the massive flat-topped hill in Yeats country in the West of Ireland. Yeats was another poet who liked to do the ‘difficult’ with language, sometimes choosing to write with…

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Review by Lisa C. Taylor This stunner of a collection by the award-winning author of four previous poetry collections brings the reader into a conjured world of broken agreements, abuse, and mental illness, crafted with a deft and original lyricism. The opening poem, Agape Feast recalls the tradition of a Christian fellowship meal that pays homage to the meals Jesus shared with his disciples. Like much of this collection, the sacred and the familial are turned inside out and churned up until traditional beliefs and relationships reveal their dark underbellies. These Gods will not protect you. They are strangleholds…

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Review by Lara Lillibridge According to the book jacket, Kathryn Nuernberger is the author of the poetry collections Rue, The End of Pink, and Rag & Bone. She has also written the essay collection Brief Interviews with the Romantic Past. Her awards include the James Laughlin Award from the Academy of American Poets, a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, and notable essays in the Best American series. She teaches in the MFA in Creative Writing program at University of Minnesota. However, I much prefer her own website’s description, “Kathryn Nuernberger is an essayist and poet who writes about the…

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Review by Christine E. Salvatore It took me a long time to write this review and one small reason might be the immense amount of craft and the nuanced beauty that went into these poems.  When someone else’s writing calls your own writing skill into question, how to write about that writing?  How to explicate those poems?  How to rise from immersion in a delicately and thoroughly rendered world full of rhyme and imagery that feels like an elixir every time you read? M.B. Powell’s collection of poems, In Relation to the Surface, surpasses my already high expectations for this…

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Review by DeMisty D. Bellinger In Viable, Chloe Yelena Miller gives herself space to mourn, celebrate, and atone. This debut full-length collection is a candid chronicle of Miller’s experiences with miscarriage, pregnancy, and new motherhood. Miller finds the melody in the language given to women regarding reproduction and loss. And to address these heavy events in her life, she looks to where she finds comfort: the English and Italian language, food, family, and poetry. Viable begins with the poem “Mid-Thirties.” The language here is easy, inviting, and the perspective borders somewhere between innocent witness and desperation. Here, a toddle hides…

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