Credo for the Checkout Line in Winter: Poems

Available
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
Bookshop.org has the highest-rated customer service of any bookstore in the world
Product Details
Price
$19.95  $18.55
Publisher
Able Muse Press
Publish Date
Pages
102
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.0 X 0.24 inches | 0.35 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781927409145

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author
Maryann Corbett grew up in McLean, Virginia. She holds a doctorate in English from the University of Minnesota and is the author of Breath Control (David Robert Books, 2012), and the chapbooks Gardening in a Time of War (Pudding House) and Dissonance (Scienter Press). Her poems, essays, and translations have appeared in River Styx, Atlanta Review, Rattle e-issues, The Evansville Review, Measure, Literary Imagination, The Dark Horse, Mezzo Cammin, Linebreak, Subtropics, and others. Her poems have have won the Lyric Memorial Award and the Willis Barnstone Translation Prize. She lives in Saint Paul, Minnesota, and works for the Minnesota Legislature. She is married to John Corbett, a teacher of statistics and mathematics, and they have two grown children.
Reviews

The crafted poems in Maryann Corbett's new book are vibrant. She is a newborn Robert Frost, with a wicked eye for contemporary life. Each poem surprises. Read her poems and feel the howling snow, the mud, and the jubilance of the first warm fertile spring days.

-Willis Barnstone


What makes Maryann Corbett such a rare, excellent writer must be her talent for weaving together various artistic impulses, so that her poems often sound both traditional and brand new, both humorous and serious, both worldly-wise and, as John Keats once put it, "capable of being in uncertainties." [She] remains a poet of the first order, and her poems are cause for gratitude, and deep enjoyment.

-Peter Campion (from the foreword)


Corbett is as comfortable and affecting within the tight confines of the Old English alliterative meter ("Cold Case") and the Sapphic stanza ("Paint Store") as she is with her supple blank verse and terza rima. Yet never does her rigorous craft interfere with the thoughtful, insightful content of these poems. A stunning collection, from one of America's most gifted contemporary poets.

-Marilyn L. Taylor


Do not dismiss this collection as "domestic poetry," "women's verse." Though grounded in seasonal rhythms and familiar settings, it is as vigorous, as reflective, as important as any man's. Sharply visual, skillfully and cleverly crafted, her poems draw out essences, "concentrated" and persisting. "Beauty changes us, / calling up wonder from our deepest selves/ to its right place."

-Catharine Savage Brosman


These masterful poems announce themselves as winter pieces, and indeed they are so full of sleet and snow that readers may wish to dress warmly. But Corbett's winter, a season when "dull forms come in the mail" and we eat "tasteless, stone-hard, gassed tomatoes," is always lushly haunted by the other seasons, the way a house in one of her poems is fronted by a "three-season porch." Corbett is one of the best-kept secrets of American poetry, and this is one of the best new collections I've read in years.

-Geoffrey Brock