A joyous celebration-rapt, exquisite, spellbinding-the artemisia is a triumph.
-Cyrus Cassells, author of Is There Room for Another Horse on Your Horse Ranch?
Somewhere in lyric poetry's once upon a time, long ago-Sappho teaches the alphabet's songs on the nature of Love. Will Barnes is a student in that school, tracing the myths, memorizing the fragments, learning by rote the earthly declensions. The seminar is Socratic, as you'll hear-a gentle call and response that turns answers back into questions, and questions back into wonder- "I've seen the deer by the creekbank rise / like wind and flame upward together." In the old grammar, I want to believe, that to see is also to be seized. Ask Actaeon about the nature of vision. Artemis is the moon-star-bird of dearest love, bathing, even now, in the heart's deep woods-no better guide than the artemisia to share a glimpse, and teach us how to suffer, gladly, the consequence.
-Dan Beachy-Quick, author of Arrows
"...and what is it that you long for that you cannot have?" asks the voice in the artemisia. Will Barnes' collection leans into an almost perfect-in-nature intimacy, forbidden. This is a gorgeous and daring collection, as frenetic and sensually woven as the human heart.
-Catherine Strisik, author of Insectum Gravitis
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