Category Archives: Book Release

Announcements for book releases by Accents Publishing, or anything we think you should know about.

Grief & Other Animals by Patty Paine

grief & other animals by patty paineGrief & Other Animals takes the reader on a stunning emotional journey through the process of coping with tragic loss from the “knife-stab sudden” pain of initial grief to the reemergence of hope in a poignant new poetry collection from Patty Paine.

What Others Say About Grief & Other Animals

Patty Paine’s superb new collection arises from the nearly unbearable—a mother’s death, but most especially the senseless death of a husband. And, as the crucial elegiac poets know, grieving never truly arrives in “stages,” and never ends in “closure.” It is a process infinitely more intricate and nuanced than the platitudes suggest, and it ends, at best, in only a fraught and vexed consolation, what one of her poems calls, “a sorrow deeper than solace.” Yet even a vexed consolation can be a form of quiet triumph, and these poems—spare, heartbroken, and always utterly precise—arrive repeatedly at such a triumph. Patty Paine has written a book of bravery and consummate artistry.

—David Wojahn

 

Elegy, in making grief a living thing, brings the dead back to life. But elegy is also how we ask ourselves to accept, a touching of the wound to accustom ourselves to pain. This stunning book both resurrects and more truly buries, and does what the best poetry does—shows me the world of another, and in doing so, brings me closer to my own. I feel bitten by these haunted poems.

—Bob Hicok

Grief and Other Animals reminds us of the great but elusive presence that stays with us after great loss, like a shadow without a subject. Paine takes on the ineffable through metaphor, action through repetition, and life through catalogs. From North Carolina to Doha, Qatar, these lyrics chronicle dates and their respective weights. She insists we “have to believe that language is a body / that won’t die.” These poems then offer us a body in which to live, an hourglass container that Paine skillfully turns over and over so it never runs out.

—Emilia Phillips

Grief & Other Animals is now available from the Accents Store.

This Wretched Vessel Release/Reading Tonight

This Wretched VesselThe Lexington Poetry Month 2014 Writing Challenge led to 114 poets submitting over 1,100 poems on the Accents Publishing Blog. You can sign up for this year’s Writing Challenge by clicking here*, but the featured poets will have a chance to read their work tonight at the Carnegie Center for Literacy and Learning.

Anyone who has been published in the anthology is welcome to read, and anyone who is interested in Lexington, poetry, or Lexington Poetry Month is encouraged to attend and bring friends, family, and poetry fiends. We will provide light refreshments and snacks. You will provide a fun, supportive atmosphere for our featured poets.

Also, a big shout-out goes to Eric Sutherland for giving Accents such a kind and generous mention during last night’s Holler Poets reading, and to Jude Lally for reading “No Matter What”, the poem that gave us the title of our anthology. We are so gracious to not only have such people in our books, but in our lives as well.

When: Thursday, May 28, 2015 @ 6pm
Where: The Carnegie Center
251 West Second Street
Lexington, KY 40507
(859) 254-4175, ext. 21

This Wretched Vessel is Now Available

This Wretched VesselWe are proud to present our anthology for the Lexington Poetry Month 2014 writing challenge!

This Wretched Vessel  is a 162-page collection of poems written and submitted by a diverse group of poets during the 2014 Lexington Poetry Month, in which participants were challenged to write at least one poem a day. Our favorite poems were selected (by editors Hap Houlihan, Christopher McCurry, and Robin LaMer-Rahija) from those submitted, and the result is an emotional, courageous, and sometimes funny poetry collection featuring the work of 114 authors.

The stunning cover art was created by Theo Edmonds.

What others had to say:

As I write this, it is April, National Poetry Month, and I am thinking about Lexington’s place in National Poetry Month, and its choice to have its poetry month in June, a move that goes against the grain. Accents Publishing, the marvelous publisher of this collection, once again goes against the grain with This Wretched Vessel. Selected by three of Lexington’s fine poets, Hap Houlihan, Robin LaMer Rahija, and Christopher McCurry, this anthology is an exciting and varied gathering of poems written during Lexington Poetry Month by an exciting and varied gathering of poets—a showcase of the diverse, vibrant, new and established voices coming out of (and to) Lexington—reading This Wretched Vessel is a lot like taking a drive on a Kentucky road in the month of June—”night air sticky at our backs, we roam” (Erin Mathew’s “Calluses”); “haunches quivers” (tina andry); “The color of dry earth before a summer rain” (Jen Parks); “Ideal isolation” (Chuck Clenney).

– Julia Johnson

The complete list of poets is below, but you can also find their entries (formatted for the web) by clicking right here.

Authors

How I Became an Angry Woman is Now Available

How I Became an Angry WomanAccents is proud to announce our newest chapbook, How I Became an Angry Woman, by Bianca Bargo.

In How I Became an Angry Woman, Bianca Bargo autopsies a doomed love in razor-edged imagery “boiling with lava and venom.” Here we have a man who has “eaten girls’ hearts like valentine candy’ and a woman who has “too many nightmares / of your old lover; / her Fingers, dirty / with knowing you first.” These are volcanic poems that ultimately understand how love—like the truth—is rarely pure and never simple.

Sarah Freligh

How I Became an Angry Woman

I was born honey-tongued
and eager, a soft thing
looking for legs
to coil around.

Over and over
I opened my mouth
to men in whispers,
kisses, confessions,
prayers to false gods.

I never asked to be this
pale demon with grit teeth.

I just woke up
one morning in her
scorching skin and

blinked against the burn
of new light until I understood
it was my own eyes
full of fire.

Bianca BargoBianca Bargo was born to a loving family in Knox County, Kentucky. She earned her B.A. in English from the University of Kentucky, where she discovered and honed her poetic voice, winning UK’s Farquhar Poetry Award and serving as Managing Editor of Limestone: A Journal of Art and Literature in 2009. From 2010-2014 as she spent her time working in retail and public education and obtaining her MA.Ed. from Eastern Kentucky University, Bianca continued to write and enjoy poetry with the inspiration and support of Lexington’s poetry scene. Her work has been published in Accents Publishing’sBigger Than They Appear: Anthology of Very Short Poems. She currently resides in Lexington, Kentucky with her husband Micah and their pets. She has yet to Figure everything out, but continues to work on it while trusting kindness and curiosity to lead the way.

Deflection by Roberta Beary

Accents Publishing is proud to announce Deflection by Roberta Beary.

Deflection“I feel astonished, happy, and lucky to have discovered Deflection.Roberta Beary’s poetry is animated with principles of Haiku, illustrative of the form but reliant on other traditions. Her work shows that a gifted poet can assert all manner of styles within a poem, sharing interests of each to give us a new breed. It’s a bright sunshiny day when we get surprising, evocative, powerful poetry coined from the gold standard of ancients. These poems are vibrant with lived experience and shockingly beautiful with new expression. The lines and poetic forms are prisms from the classical, and lyrical, to distilled Asian thought. This book is essential in furthering the art of poetry.”

Grace Cavalieri

Deflection is available at the Accents Publishing Store.

Black Achilles by Curtis L. Crisler

Black Achilles by Curtis L. Crisler

Black Achilles by Curtis L. Crisler is now available from the Accents store.

Damn … these poems are fiercely human, they call out the names of gods and demigods like reluctant lovers writhing in joy and in pain …

Frank X Walker
Kentucky Poet Laureate,
Author of Turn Me Loose: The Unghosting of Medgar Evers

“Such a small wound, such a huge nuisance, death. In Black Achilles, Curtis L. Crisler takes the very human suffering of a torn tendon and uses it to explore our love affair with convenience, our ever-growing cloak of invulnerability, our pining for youth, immortality—how we unhinge at its loss. It is b-ball and score, the opposite of frustration/fragility &ellip; weakness. It is crutches and numbness, swagger and ‘what tender means.’ All this with a deft rim shot, a language of swerves and dunks, rebounds and alley-oops.”

-Leslie Anne Mcilroy,
Managing & Poetry Editor, HEArt,
and author of Slag (Main Street Rag)

“If Achilles is the mythologized Greek warrior-hero from the Trojan War, who is Black Achilles? Curtis L. Crisler’s collection of poems invites the reader to the freeways, playgrounds, and hospitals in search of Black Achilles. He is launching a stale jump shot, removing a stale bandage, limping on stale tendons. His legend is further cemented by his godly ability to ‘still hobble like monsters do’ on one leg. In the inner most soul of these poems, Black Achilles is the body deconstructed. We are moved to ask questions germane to the conversation between science and sport: what are the risks? Or, questions germane to science and ghetto: what are the risks? These poems are visceral; we are uncomfortable in the name of compassion. How do we celebrate the perfect imperfection of the body and its capacity to break? Crisler does this elegantly. The elegance and stable construction of these poems only add to the complex dimensions here. Black Achilles is another gift from a poet who’s gifted at giving.”

Derrick Harriell,
author of Cotton and Ropes
(Aquarius Press/Willow Books)

ISBN: 978-1-936628-32-2
Softcover, 5½” x 8½”
$8.00
Purchase at the Accents Store

Kingdom of Speculation by Barbara Goldberg

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Accents Publishing is proud to announce that Barbara Goldberg’s Kingdom of Speculation is now available from the Accents Store.

“In this book you will be under the spell of imagination that is truly impressive. But, more than that: you will fall in love with Barbara Goldberg’s syntax. The way her sentence works against her line-breaks, creating fireworks, is a fairy tale in and of itself. Her poems are magical, not because they contain princesses and ravens and thieves of eggs. They are magical because their music grabs us and won’t let us be. The secret to true music cannot be understood. It can only be applauded.”

Ilya Kaminsky,
Author of Dancing in Odessa

Kingdom of Speculation is available from the Accents Store.

Mother, Loose by Brandel France de Bravo

mother_loose_cover_finalAccents Publishing is proud to release Brandel France de Bravo’s Mother, Loose. Mother, Loose was selected by Patty Paine for the Judge’s Choice award in our 2014 chapbook competition. In the foreward, Patty says that she was, “struck time and again by how France de Bravo transports the reader from familiar to utterly unexpected contexts through startling imaginative leaps and unexpected metaphors.”

Mother, Loose plays with familiar nursery rhymes. Poems with titles such as “The Old Woman in the Shoe” and “Jack Sprat” give the reader a general sense of the stories being explored, but Brandel gives her unique perspective. As Sandra Beasley commented, “Nursery rhymes become impishly twisted.”

Ladybird Ladybird Fly Away Home Your House Is on Fire

standing by the flowering white yucca between
Christmas and New Year’s in a valley surrounded
by mountains like Chinese scroll paintings
phone in my hand standing in the garden of
a house I no longer live in my mother says
“x-ray” her dry cough flowering unremarkable
except for its constancy walking less the year before
a winded valley surrounded by mountains until
the smokeless fingers grew bulbs (they called it
“clubbing”) sent smokeless signals “please”
I said “see someone” and after Christmas the
house I once lived in phoned the garden saying
“x-ray” like a painting “mass” white as yucca.

You can purchase Mother, Loose from the Accents store or find copies at neighborhood bookstores, such as the Morris book shop or The Wild Fig.

Childhood by Emily R. Grosholz, & Lucy Vines

ChildhoodAccents is proud to announce our first illustrated book, Childhood, written by accomplished poet Emily R. Grosholz with drawings by the Parisian artist Lucy Vines.

Childhood is a heartwarming collection about childbirth and adoption, about children and parents; and a fixed percentage of sales will go to an international nonprofit organization that works to protect and encourage children worldwide by providing food and water, medical attention, shelter from violence, and education. (Click here for more information.)

What others are saying about Childhood and Emily R. Grosholz:

These eloquent, edgy poems write of youth and parenting in powerful ways. They also go well beyond that, in addressing childhood as revelation […]

Eavon Boland,
Professor of English, Stanford University

 

Emily Grosholz is a singular presence in American letters—a poet-philosopher whose brilliant verse on science, mathematics and ideas has been justly praised.

Dana Gioia,
Past Director, National Endowment for the Arts

Childhood by Emily Grosholz reminds me of how delightful, invigorating, and at the same time humbling my experience of parenthood was.

Tadatoshi Akiba,
Past President, Mayors for Peace

Childhood will be available October 15th, 2014 and is currently available for pre-order from the Accents Store.

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