Author: Mom Egg Review

An Interview by J.P. Howard, MER VOX Editor-at-Large, of Mireya Perez-Bustillo and Patsie Alicia Ifill I’ve been thinking a lot about friendships between women, and in particular between women writers, and how we often sustain one another. Not only do we write together through these tumultuous political times, but we often lift each other up, hold one another accountable, are able to call each other out on our stuff, and lovingly remind our sistagurlfirends about upcoming writing deadlines. For those who are parents, we share a special bond, and no matter our child’s age, we look to our friends for…

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The Mother Dispossessed Curator: Patricia Brody Featured Poets Srividya Kannan Ramachandran Elisabeth Frischauf Esther Cohen Ellen C. Goldberg Lisa J Cihlar Jane Schulman Katrina Kostro Elizabeth Lorde-Rollins Alexandria Mitchell From the Curator: THESE VOICES Whenever I see the logo letters MER, first I think, Ah –Mermaid! then Mom Egg Review, and somehow these body-sea images of women’s magic beckon me to enter their depths. The poems and paintings you’re about to encounter, (hopefully you’ll stop and paddle around to see and experience from different angles) – are etched, colored, written by women in Seeking Your Voice: A Poetry and Memoir Workshop…

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Review by Bunny Goodjohn It is hard not to feel something of the voyeur when interacting with the short-run chapbook Folie à Quatre. Its high gloss cover offers up a sepia-tint woman in a sheer chemise who appears disinterested or unfazed by her audience, in communion, perhaps, with her own naked body and thoughts. Beyond the cover, a sheet of tissue acts as a soft lens through which we discern the chapbook’s title page, heightening this sense of being privy to things conventionally cloaked, obscured, made secret. Past the title page, we encounter four sections of poetry by four female…

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Review by Barbara Ellen Sorensen In Les Fauves, Barbara Crooker gracefully achieves the daunting task of creating ekphrastic poetry that transcends the purely visual. Compact explorations of meditative beauty, the poems highlight Crooker’s remarkable craftsmanship and skill. She is adept at coaxing the reader to the center of her poems where they sizzle and pop, blooming open like an Asian flowering tea. Acutely aware of using all five senses in poetry writing, Crooker infuses her poems with scent, sound, color, taste, and texture until they become epitomes of new language: “Dark violet chocolate // with a greenish flesh, blood-red pulp,…

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Review by Grace Gardiner The title of Judy Kronenfeld’s fourth full-length collection Bird Flying through the Banquet alludes to a metaphor for existence posed by the 8th century English monk Saint Bede the Venerable in his Ecclesiastical History of the English People. In this seminal text on English religious history and identity, Bede describes “[t]he present life of man upon earth” as brief, rich, and mysteriously bounded as the flight of a sparrow through a warm and lively banquet, the bird first escaping, then (un)willingly returning to the cold winter night and its storms. Kronenfeld, who is Lecturer Emerita at the…

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Janet Garber’s comic debut novel, Dream Job, Wacky Adventures of an HR Manager, has been named a Runner-Up in the 2016 Shelf Unbound Best Indie Book contest and a Finalist in the 2017 New Generation Indie Book Awards, making the author very happy indeed. She has also been interviewed on a UK radio broadcast here. Janet’s website is www.janetgarber.com.

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Review by Jennifer Martelli Field Guide to Autobiography is a mingling of sound, disintegration, and copulation, using the gorgeous Latinate language of insects and oceanic creatures, to reach this tragic and “absolute brightness” of life. The very title of the book hints at scientific nomenclature with a brilliant female voice. Melissa Eleftherion blurs the expectations and parameters of a book of poetry, also. The poems surprise with their flouting of poetic rules, as if the speaker is responding to an inner law, one that is generative, holy: To become solemnly visible, gratification of the body A curving, a fabric, tidal…

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Review by Ros Howell Ellen Meeropol’s third novel, Kinship of Clover, explores difference, interconnectedness and the potential for new life to grow in the ashes of tragic loss. Her characters are linked together like winding tendrils leading back to one night when the commune they were involved with held a naming ceremony in a forest: two children died and the community was blown apart. Eleven years later, Jeremy is a botany major at college and his father has been recently released from prison. The novel traces how Jeremy struggles to manage the trauma of that tragic night as it…

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Please join us this Sunday for a Reading: MER at Summer on the Hudson: Mamapalooza – Sing Out Sister Sunday, May 28, 2017 Readers: Keisha Gaye Anderson     Tina Kelly     Colleen Michaels Deena November     Lee Schwartz    Lynne Shapiro Pier I in Riverside Park South —  West 70th Street Manhattan MER reading 3:40-4:20 (Festival 12-5 PM) More readings coming up soon!  We’ll keep you posted!

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Review by Christine Salvatore Music sets the tone for Lori Desrosiers’ second full collection of poetry, Sometimes I Hear the Clock Speak, in which poems relay a family history of music, dance, and song. Like a tango, Desrosiers leads us from adulthood to childhood, from the present and back to the 1960s. Each movement brings us closer to an understanding of how time stays in motion but the voices of the past accompany us generation after generation. Sometimes I hear the Clock Speak is divided into four sections, linked by imagery of violin music, guitar thrumming, and lots of dancing.…

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