Review
Linda Gregerson, author of Waterborne and Magnetic North
Rappleyes poems in Figured Dark come from an imagination without peer. There is nothing predictable about them. As Pound urged his heirs to, Rappleye does make it new, plumbing the palpable ordinary, with a dazzling diversity of images, and through a window we've not looked into before.
Dan Gerber, author of A Primer on Parallel Lives and A Voice from the River
Figured Dark is a lovely book, heart-stopping, at moments, for its directness. The poems feature a conversational and lyrical plainness. Greg Rappleye fires and tempers metaphor, talk, cultural and literary allusion, and emotion so skillfully that readers can look through to the heart of the matterthe odd details of living and what goodness remains after death's insinuations. What does the body want? / To be a crucible says the body, the poet writes. Figured Dark is crucible.
Carol Frost, author of The Queen's Desertion
Product Description
--Linda Gregerson, author of Waterborne and Magnetic North
"Rappleye's poems in Figured Dark come from an imagination without peer. There is nothing predictable about them. As Pound urged his heirs to, Rappleye does make it new, plumbing the palpable ordinary, with a dazzling diversity of images, and through a window we've not looked into before."
--Dan Gerber, author of A Primer on Parallel Lives and A Voice from the River
"Figured Dark is a lovely book, heart-stopping, at moments, for its directness. The poems feature a conversational and lyrical plainness. Greg Rappleye fires and tempers metaphor, talk, cultural and literary allusion, and emotion so skillfully that readers can look through to the heart of the matter--the odd details of living and what goodness remains after death's insinuations. `What does the body want? / To be a crucible says the body,' the poet writes. Figured Dark is crucible."
--Carol Frost, author of The Queen's Desertion