"In this thoughtful and nuanced collection, Lori Desrosiers maps that country sometimes called the past, sometimes called memory, into which loved ones have gone or soon will be disappearing. It’s a space limned by nostalgia, which can be beautiful for the trace of what used to be, in the way that an armless goddess is lovely. It’s a place inhabited by spectral presences who don’t seem to realize they are going or gone— Such is the thrall and pull that this world still exerts over all of us. And so, the ghosts of those who perished in the tsunami in Japan hail taxis and reserve private rooms at hotels. The poet’s grandmother at 70 shoplift[s] at the five and dime. The ghost of Emily Dickinson speaks through her washbowl, her inkwell, her quill. In the ordinary calamity of our days, we seek their guidance and benevolence. Among those still with us, we realize we miss each other even while we’re still here. Love is a longing thrown across a bridge where someone is waiting on the other side: we call to each other, we wait for the answer. The poems in Keeping Planes in the Air live in both the waiting and the calling—but the poet gently reminds us that it is the work of our breathing that keeps things aloft." Luisa A. Igloria
"Poet Henrik Nordbrant speaks of 'the glow which approaching death/ leaves on photographs of people who died young/ in the memory of those left behind.' Such is the aura of singular brilliance in the face of utter bereavement and forfeiture manifested in the verse found in Lori Desrosiers’ new volume of poems, Keeping Planes in the Air. The poetry tendered here widens from an insular grief toward 'finding beauty in imperfection/ how skin stretches to accommodate/ bones their restless march towards death.' We glimpse the poet’s vision in a space where 'the ghost of our intentions/ lingers in peripheral vision/ like the flash of light/ from a torn retina,' and in those glimmers of an afterlife 'we are torn/ between staying put/ and taking flight.' Keeping Planes in the Air is for any of us who have witnessed the ambiguity of holding onto our lives and loves in the constant presence of an impending loss that leaves us (and the poet) with a wounded wonderment ‘which is/ more than [we] can fathom/ or just enough.'” Christina Lovin
Presence & Absence Google maps search for my parents’ first house 11 Before the split 13 Benevolent Ghosts 14 Famous Last Words 15 My Grandmother Shoplifted 16 I See my Grandmother Bella’s Face 17 Garlic 18 Ghosts of Sohoku (found poem) 19 Writing in Emily Dickinson’s Bedroom 21 the ghost of our intentions 22 In a certain light 23 I Am Not 24 Mother on the Beach 25 Ferry 26 Keeping Planes in the Air 27 De Milo 28 Joe on the Beach 29 Forgetting 30 Books for my Mother 31 Side-effect of short-term memory loss 32 My Mother Dreams (a ghazal) 33 My Heart 34 The Last Fall 35 For Blanche 37 How Small 38
Bodies & Dreams A Dream 41 For Gary 42 Wake Up Call 43 Since I’m awake listening to you snore in the other room 44 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire 45 Playing Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto in High School Orchestra 47 Rewind Sonata 48 about the body 49 Sofia’s Thumb 50 The Reason to Love a Bridge 51 Elephant of Mortality 52 Redemption 53 The birds are more resilient than we are 54 Ferry Ride with Lines from Whitman 55 Ice Fishing in the ICU 56 Blur 57 The King of Television 58 My Name is Light/ Vigil for Orlando 59 I Dream of the Bus to Hell 60 City Girl in the Suburbs 61 For Now 62 Spaces & Possibilities Ceremony 65 Rooted 66 There are Leaves 67 Neighbor 68 Mother and Apple Pie 69 Boy on the train 70 At the Tea Tasting 71 stepped into the music store and fell in love 72 The Homage Stitch 73 Beth with Hummingbirds 74 Dad Scents 75 Second sleep 76 Elephant Custard 78 Dinner with a Friend 79 Why My Grandfather Didn’t Sell My Mother to the Yiddish Theatre 80 Praise to the Earth 81 Cuddling with Mom 82 why I will plant a garden this year 83 Perhaps Fireflies 84 Salt 85 Tether 87 Words are Not Enough 88
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