Reviews
Description
In mapping our coming and going, Jo Taylor gives us a nuanced portrait of a place, the rural Midwest, shows a fiction writer's feeling for people and character, and creates a music that lodges her imagery in our memory. Her explorations of place open into a vision of "the ruins of time," the advances of change, and the coming darkness of death, yet she has the poet's eye and ear to sing that "the wind whispers alleluia through the reeds, / wild geese whine an alto chorus."
Norbert Krapf
former Indiana Poet Laureate
In mapping our coming and going, Jo Taylor gives us a nuanced portrait of a place, the rural Midwest, shows a fiction writer's feeling for people and character, and creates a music that lodges her imagery in our memory. Her explorations of place open into a vision of "the ruins of time," the advances of change, and the coming darkness of death, yet she has the poet's eye and ear to sing that "the wind whispers alleluia through the reeds, / wild geese whine an alto chorus."
Norbert Krapf
former Indiana Poet Laureate
Reviews