Comb

Comb front cover

Comb is the story of a girl “under the spell of history,” growing up in the shadow of the legendary Khyber Pass which is both a bridge between disparate civilizations and an impassable divide. Shadab Zeest Hashmi reveals the tangles of empire and language, history and myth, exile and belonging — from the lens of childhood, integrating memory with the history of one of the most significant geopolitical and cultural thresholds of the world. This is a book that honors thresholds in a time of closed doors, written with a poet’s conviction in the regency of love.

Mesopo, by Eva Dietrich

Mesopo front cover

Eva Dietrich’s latest novel is a surprising story of love, triumph, and the power of language in a magical world you’ll want to visit over and over again.

Our hero, twelve-year-old Ankido, summoned from the real world by his story-telling grandmother Habuti, is on a quest to save his missing father and the 60,000 words of the magical realm of Mesopo, the land where all fantasy originates, a land whose words and language are now in peril.

Can he save his father in time?

Eating the Light, by Mary Barbara Moore

Eating the Light front cover

In Eating the Light, these new poems of Mary Moore ‘s new poems offer a feast for the reader.  On subjects both natural and human-wrought, her eye is the painter’s: vividly clear.  She creates an appetite for looking and a fulfillment of seeing.   Moore’s perceptions are sensuous, intelligent, and the world in the poems is a world transformed both physically and emotionally.  Her metaphors illuminate and satisfy, and having dined with her, we begin to glow, sated on such delectables. These poems embody a kind of mystical sensitivity to the sources of life:  immediate, continuously perishing, making its considerable mark in these gorgeous lines.

Holy Ghosts of Whiskey, by Marty Silverthorne

Holy Ghosts of Whiskey front cover

Holy Ghost of Whiskey is a beautiful commitment to the god-force of memory. Marty Silverthorne reminds us over and over again how poetry strengthens our root. These deep evocations of language and ghosts create pathways that charm us into honky tonk heavens. From beginning to end these poems offer a haunted awareness of the joys, sacrifices, and sorrows that are singing in the hinges of three room shot gun shacks. These poems lift up the roots and reveal well-crafted tenderness and emphatic imagination that bears witness to the longings and challenges we all have confronting our angels, our ghosts, loves, and losses.