Book Review

The Gruesome Acts of Capitalism

The Harper’s Index, that cheeky, opinionated list of facts and figures in the front of the progressive American magazine is […]

Michael Moore

Trying to write an objective biography of Michael Moore has got to be one of the toughest challenges going. The […]

Portable Altamont

Portable Altamont is amusing. There’s nothing wrong with a funny poem, is there? Not everything needs to be gloomy like: […]

Unfamiliar Weather

No one can sum up Chris Hutchinson’s poetry better than he does himself: “a deep-felt nothingness you consider/ art.” His […]

The Jill Kelly Poems

Sex. Sex. Sex. The poems in this book are dripping with it. Not surprising since the book is named after […]

Theatre of War

I’m not sure if you noticed, but there’s a country to the south of us called America that produces a […]

Glass Psalms

Poetry is supposed to release a power to the reader that will hopefully save or enlighten their life in some […]

Anything but the Moon

George Sipos’s Anything but the Moon is a violent reminder of everything that I am not. Sipos can balance the […]

I Should Never Have Fired the Sentinel

One of the first poems in Jennifer LoveGrove’s second collection, I Should Never Have Fired the Sentinel, describes an innocent […]

Sooner

Through language that refuses to repress the mind or accept any moment of passivity, Christakos slaps the face of the […]