BeauportI Want to Make You Safe
Amy King
 
O BonO Bon
Brandon Shimoda
 
BeauportHow Phenomena Appear
to Unfold

Leslie Scalapino
 
BeauportBeauport
Kate Colby
 
Time of SkyTime of Sky &
Castles in the Air

Ayane Kawata
Trans. by Sawako Nakayasu
 
bharatjivaPortrait of
Colon Dash Parenthesis

Jeffrey Jullich
 
bharatjivaBharat jiva
kari edwards
 
No GenderNO GENDER
edited by Julian T. Brolaski,
erica kaufman,
and E. Tracy Grinnell
 
HyperglossiaHyperglossia
Stacy Szymaszek
 
From Dame QuicklyFrom Dame Quickly
Jennifer Scappettone
 
Face Before AgainstFace Before Against
Isabelle Garron
Trans. by Sarah Riggs
 
Animate Inanimate AimsAnimate, Inanimate Aims
Brenda Iijima
 
fruitlandsFruitlands
Kate Colby
 
four from japanFour from Japan
Kiriu Minashita,
Kyong-Mi Park,
Ryoko Sekiguchi,
Takako Arai
Trans. by Sawako Nakayasu
 
counter daemonsCounter Daemons
Roberto Harrison
 
emptied of all shipsEmptied of All Ships
Stacy Szymaszek
 
inner china Inner China
Eva Sjödin
Trans. by Jennifer Hayashida
 
mudraThe Mudra
Kerri Sonnenberg
 
another kind of tendernessAnother Kind of Tenderness
Xue Di
Trans. by Keith Waldrop,
Forrest Gander, Stephen Thomas,
Theodore Deppe and
Sue Ellen Thompson
 
euclid shuddersEuclid Shudders
Mark Tardi
 
notebooksNotebooks 1956-1978
Danielle Collobert
Trans. by Norma Cole
 
house seen from nowhereThe House Seen from Nowhere
Keith Waldrop
Excerpt



I Want to Make You SafeI want to make you safe

Amy King

November 2011 • 87 pp. • $15.00 • ISBN: 978-1-933959-23-8
Cover art by Deborah Grant

VerseDaily features "The Identity in My Crisis". February 2012.
PoetryDaily features "The White of Sacre Couer Against a Blue
  Parisian Sky
". February 2012.
Christopher Higgs for HTML Giant January 27, 2012.
Michelle Gillett for The Rumpus review. January 14, 2012.
Poets & Writers video. January 3, 2012.
Coldfront's list of Top 30 Poetry Books of 2011,
  with review by John Deming. January 1, 2012.
Boston Globe: among the best poetry books of 2011.
ConnotationPress.com review. December 2011.
The French Exit blog review. November 22, 2011.
Small Press Distribution Poetry Best-Seller. Nov - Dec 2011.

SPD




"Rarely have the nude and the cooked been so neatly joined” as in Amy King’s I Want to Make You Safe. If “us,” “herons,” and “dust” rhyme,  then these poems rhyme. If that makes you feel safe, it shouldn’t. Amy King’s poems are exuberant, strange, and a bit grotesque. They’re spring-loaded and ready for trouble. Categories collapse. These are the new “thunderstorms with Barbie roots."

— Rae Armantrout


Vulnerability, fragility, and anxiety are all flushed out into the open here and addressed with such strong sound and rhythm that we recognize a resilient, defiant strength within them. King puts relentless pressure on forces seemingly beyond our reach and, in bringing them closer, exposes their own vulnerable centers. This is a poetry equally committed to language as a tool with social obligations and language as an art material obligated to reveal its own beauty. King’s language does both magnificently. 

— Cole Swensen


Amy King’s poems seem to encompass all that we think of as the “natural” world, i.e. sex, sun, love, rotting, hatching, dreaming, especially in the wonderful long poem “This Opera of Peace.” She brings these abstractions to brilliant, jagged life, emerging into rather than out of the busyness of living: “Let the walls bear up the angle of the floor,/Let the mice be tragic for all that is caged,/Let time’s contagion mar us/until spoken people lie as particles of wind.

— John Ashbery


I love Amy King's smile in photos of Amy King, Amy King's exuberance and looping, bashing panache (flamboyant manner, reckless courage) in the poems of Amy King, I'm going to say Amy King every chance I get in this blurb to make you think "I gotta read me some Amy King," especially if you're "looking for anything/that will pull the cork, boil the blood/of displeasure," as only the poems of Amy King can in the world in which Amy King is King (and Queen).     

— Bob Hicok


The first poem I read by Amy King was "MEN BY THE LIPS OF WOMEN" and it struck me with a force I had previously felt on encountering masterworks by Lorca and Dylan Thomas.  I won't live long enough to see if her poetry will continue to equal the magnificence of theirs, but the fact that she achieved it once (at least) proves to me it could.     

— Bill Knott




NYSCA Leslie Scalapino — O Books Fund

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