Postmodern Poetry – Xanax Pop by Lewis LaCook

Postmodern, Post-Avant, Post-everything

Main menu

Skip to content
  • Home

Monthly Archives: August 2010

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

That Little Drop of Poison htt…

Posted on August 26, 2010 by Lewis LaCook

That Little Drop of Poison http://ow.ly/18JHjd

Posted in Postmodern Poetry | Leave a comment |

Cluster headaches http://ow.ly…

Posted on August 22, 2010 by Lewis LaCook

Cluster headaches http://ow.ly/18FVjv

Posted in Postmodern Poetry | Leave a comment |

After osiris reasons the ranch…

Posted on August 16, 2010 by Lewis LaCook

After osiris reasons the ranch away far depths sound coltrane storms tropically depressed country greenery for cool dead wood pain

Posted in Postmodern Poetry | Leave a comment |

The reason isis singing come o…

Posted on August 16, 2010 by Lewis LaCook

The reason isis singing come on in my kitchen fields after forestville dark painting rust corners with blue eyes in painless rooms

Posted in Postmodern Poetry | Leave a comment |

Is it even reasonable, this wi…

Posted on August 16, 2010 by Lewis LaCook

Is it even reasonable, this willow, dark and sensate amid dropped fields? My glasses are breaking your heart on sharp notes

Posted in Postmodern Poetry | Leave a comment |

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Follow Me!

Follow Me on FacebookFollow Me on TwitterFollow Me on FlickrFollow Me on YouTubeFollow Me on Last.fmFollow Me on SoundcloudFollow Me on E-mail

Beyond The Bother of Sunlight by Sheila E. Murphy and Lewis LaCook Now Available!

Beyond The Bother of Sunlight by Sheila E. Murphy and Lewis LaCook Now Available!
"Lewis LaCook and Sheila E. Murphy each make poetry that is based on a heightened sense of the swarming and proteic emotional and experiential – even historical – resonances of the events, processes, and situations of very keenly felt human lives. This means that they both over- and under-lay these processes/experiences with many other things from the complexities of any present moment, so the reader sees/thinks these many things simultaneously, like looking through many transparent layers of images, all superimposed. This is writing that is not so much concerned with presenting any kind of rhetorical moral “correctness” (the most visible – and tedious – mode of American poetry for some time now), as in creating a truly complete human world."
--John M. Bennett

Available Now from BlazeVox[books]

Archives

Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: Toolbox by Automattic.