What impresses one first about David J. Rothman is his immense imaginative and intellectual range, but the more one reads his striking and exuberant poetry the more deeply one feels its emotional force and quiet but genuine ferocity. He is an Apollonian touched by the divine madness of Dionysus. Diverse, demanding, and delightful, his poems abundantly reward the reader’s attention. Dana Gioia
You’ve never read a book like this one, crackling with comedy and drama, colloquial, breezy and bitingly Byronic. Here we find characters including God, a Demon, a Muse, and a hero, an ordinary modern man. We have a vital panoply of good and evil served up by a poet of cultivated earthiness, “Mud mixed with wonder.” Even in the face of suffering, David Rothman dares us to “live large. Go big. Get tough.” Here is an abundance and energy rarely seen in contemporary poetry. David Mason
David J. Rothman lives in Colorado with his wife and two sons. He is the Director of the Poetry Concentration with an Emphasis on Versecraft in the MFA program at Western State Colorado University and also teaches at the University of Colorado at Boulder, Denver University, and Lighthouse Writers Workshop in Denver. He is the author of four other volumes of poetry, the editor of a poetry anthology, and a co-author of a volume of criticism.
Lisa Marie Basile writes a poetry of sensual, passionate dissolving and devious wit. It’s a poetry of bodies recombined into secret rituals and “homemade mythology.” Triste is a journey of lush textures and surprise. JOANNA FUHRMAN
One day, there was an atomic bomb beneath my lawn in a shape vaguely like yours, and digging carefully, I realized to love something is to think you could explode.” In Lisa Marie Basile’s triste, the overwhelming urge of the body can rip it apart (“the winter wet peels my edges and my plaster starts to curl”) or transform it into landscape. Sometimes the speaker is present in the urge; at other times “presence” itself is fleeting and language fails (“me, forgetting my language…. It came out in all the wrong colors”) Victorian nightmares; loss of innocence; Kafka deposited into True Blood with a Grimes soundtrack. “You find in-grown wings within my chest cage. I want to use them so badly but don’t know how.’ Holy shit!” BRUCE COVEY
BENJAMIN
The overbite—how do I distinguish between the overbite and the summer itself? You are an endless season I’m swimming in, with yellow cotton bloomers stretching your mouth so to sit on the edge of your tongue, and have I told you, perched like a gargoyle or a dove beating out of a throat, that I want to watch your teeth slowly fall away? I myself have lived the dream half-remembered. To have been waiting out the cold war in a room with white walls & a lesion on my tongue in the form of a man I would not fuck. But before I knew you, somehow if I wished hard enough, I could grow and water you inside my head.
You appear.
How does a human sprout? The tools and the seed, and the knowledge of the something that feeds the Sisyphean task of waiting to see if a boulder will stay in its place. I am growing your weeds in strange places all over my body— my armpits, my finger beds in the gray glow of a quiet room where we argue until our arguments became myth, and here I am as Hera, stone and stone cold, and there you are as Zeus, until I get tired of all the marble and all the temples and we just sleep mouth open mouths closed teeth stacked up like soldiers who want to kiss their opponents.
One day, there was an atomic bomb beneath my lawn in a shape vaguely like yours, and digging carefully, I realized to love something is to think you could explode.
I have decided to join the human race today. I have decided to give up the fear. I have poured an endless glass and still I feel the thirst. There are dreams in which I cannot be sated and I’m on my knees like a girl with her mouth open waiting—
for you, because you are perched like a moth at the window or foreign like the blood of a mother who forgets she’s given birth, in love with the green squirming thing in her hands.
You seem to be unaware of all the daggers.
There’s me surrounded by daggers perfectly still and uninjured by an overbite even Dali would have liked, painting you in some excess and gilded glory, your body a cape
lined in liquid gold, a gratuitousness spilling into me.
I am left to beg you to lift your hands onto me —I am a natural and victorious whore—
with you on the tit, under the tit, or over the top, an archway, like you’re holding up a cat by the nape of its neck
afraid and still submissive out of love
& cup your hands because I know you’ll need to feel how human I really am.
It is all either fat or muscle or something else.
The difference between the tangible and intangible
is the very same between having heart & just existing.
To me your mouth is a cannon, is a season, is the offing,
and to me, you are human-shaped with a tail. You curious love of mine.
Lisa Marie Basile is a graduate of The New School’s MFA program for poetry. She is the author of Andalucia (Brothel Books) and Triste (Dancing Girl Press). Her work can be seen in Word Riot, PANK, kill author, The Dr. T.J. Eckleburg Review, elimae & Pear Noir! among other publications. She is the founding editor of Patasola Press and is a writer for thethepoetry. She is also an assistant editor for Fifth Wednesday Journal. She is a managing member of The Poetry Society of New York, which produces the Annual NYC Poetry Festival. www.lisamariebasile.tumblr.com.
Lisa Marie Basile’s triste: mourning stories is at once timeless and fascinated with time. Shifting between prose and verse, Basile explores the impermanence of life. These persona poems are hot and unruly as fever dreams, enticing the reader with glimpses and glimmers. Burning flowers and clawfoot bathtubs. Buzzing powerlines and blue lemons. Reading this book feels like staring into a baroque Magic Eye. As the poems pile on, a narrative emerges: what does it mean to become human? “It is all either fat/ or muscle/ or something else” – something ineffable, like the trace of a lover’s touch remembered years later. Ghosts call out to each other and to us, compelling us to listen. LILY LADEWIG | The stories in triste are dark dreams, black lace ball gowns and jet mourning beads… a ravenous collection that breathes desire, longing, sensuality, a hankering for what was and what we are left with. Basile uses glowing language and stirring images, triste is a burning despair that assaults all senses. HELEN VITORIA