Flash Floods are Anomalies by Jesse Morse

(1 customer review)

$14.99

 

These brief prose poems function as “meditations in an emergence,” though what is coming forth—which is existence, being, all of it—remains ever unfixed, out of reach. The result is not disorientation but a kind of tenderness for the fragmented though often beautiful attempts at knowing, “the way words unvelop on the page.” These poems feel right for our time. They evoke the uncertainty and enormity that seems to dwarf us, and the hope that humans are “something other than lost.”

–Allison Cobb, author of Plastic: An Autobiography

 

These prose poems hopscotch and hover above a playground of swerving soundscapes like flash floods of murmurations over windswept wheat. “Ablaze in a barnstorm.” “A television in reverse.” “Agogged.” Morse’s discrete instants of disjunctive astonishment welcome us as friends with these mercurial passages through the whir of words. “Dear slipstream, I’ll call you come what may.” Dive into the current of onomatopoetic anomalies and you will swim with dolphins cresting, “dreamt afoot. Or afloat.”

–W. Scott Howard, editor of Denver Quarterly

 

 

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Flash Floods are Anomalies

by Jesse Morse

$14.99, paper

978-1-64662-542-0

2021

Jesse Morse holds a poetry PhD from University of Denver. He is currently a faculty member at Clark College in Vancouver, WA. His poems and book reviews have appeared in Amerarcana, Bombay Gin, Colorado Review, Denver Quarterly, Golden Handcuffs Review, jacketmagazine, Page Boy, Poetry Flash, and Vanitas, among others. He reviews sports literature for Oregon Sports News. His chapbook – Rotations (part of the Eric Chavez Sonnets) – was once published by C_L Press. He plays guitar and sings in the rock band The Whirlies (https://thewhirlies.bandcamp.com/releases), and helps run 1122 Gallery (https://1122gallery.com/index.html) in Portland, Oregon, where he lives with his wife, the poet Jennifer Denrow, and their daughter Wren.

 

1 review for Flash Floods are Anomalies by Jesse Morse

  1. SarJeep Hartounian (verified owner)

    A spectacular voyage into the ethos of the underwater milieu encountered by the chosen few who have lived to tell of their deluge experience. Most poetic piece of prose since Naughty by Nature released OPP in 1991.

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