Book Description
In 2001, poet Anselm Hollo wrote, With humor, tenderness, and surprising candor, Roxie Powell ventures into rarely visited territory to an ever-questioning mind. In his newest collection, Roxie keeps questioning, this time considering the connection between love and painand how one can rarely exist without the other. Letters Like Lettuce Gone Soggy with Pain One realizes that each life is a slippery vessel which glides through pain until it reaches some shore. At which time tents are erected, sometimes castles, and for some moments, all is fine. Old letters remind one that life will have its way, neither your castle nor your tent are sufficient to protect you, Only love has a chance. This book pulls together a wide variety of Powells poetry, the majority of which has never been published before. Most were written over the past twenty-five years, with the exception of a handful, which were written this year, such as Kansas Soliloquy and Turkestan. For Powell, the journey of life is illuminated by love, and emotional pain is native to the process.