Something went wrong
Please try again
Landscapes I & II
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
01 March 2006

New York City, Holyoke (MA), Keene (NH)
If you think a complete sentence expresses a complete thought, forget it. Lesle Lewis’ elegant sentences non-sequitur into uncanny compilations that are never done. We feel them going on, building beyond the page. Juxtaposing the rolling rhythms of prose with distinctly poetic content, Lewis has come up with another incisively intelligent, deeply generous collectionit’s a gift to contemporary poetry.”Cole Swensen
"The whimsical, highly animated landscapes of Lesle Lewis’ second collection will surprise and delight. In confident prose poems, 'Abstraction puts on her cowboy boots' and strides into the unknown. Employing collage reminiscent of Gertrude Stein’s breathless dazzle, Lewis creates landscapes where surreal meets New England bucolic, meaning is arrived at cumulatively, and the animated and the 'real' converse. This is a bar-raising kind of collection. In future reviews and poetry readings I may sign-off or leave the room immediately with a 'Feh! Not as good as Lewis.'"Stride Magazine
"Lewis gives us the something that is always other than the first touch. Something always lies beneath or above or beyond."The Keene Sentinel
"In their nervous eloquence, Lesle Lewis's surprising lines behave like brushstrokes that barely touch the page before lifting off again in the mind. Equal parts fable, modernist prose poem, philosophical investigation, and social geography, Landscapes I & II makes all these elements talk to each other through daring juxtaposition. The conversation is about the everyday workings of art and life, but its conclusions are always unpredictable. At once wildly expressionist and tightly structured, these poems delight with their agility and speed."Peter Gizzi
Lesle Lewis is also the author of Small Boat, which won the 2002 Iowa Poetry Prize. Her poems have appeared in many journals, including: Pleiades, American Letters & Commentary, Northern New England Review, Old Crow, Green Mountains Review, Barrow Street, Mudfish, and Slope. She teaches literature and writing at Landmark College in Vermont and lives in New Hampshire.