-Michael Blanchard, author of The Pearl Diver's Daughter
'It's always a pull between dirt and heaven, this boneyard life, ' writes Suzanne Underwood Rhodes in one of these marvelous, affecting, withering, sharply etched poems. This is a book of grief and love in equal portions. There is a genuine appreciation of life here, in all its redolence and bright glares. And I found myself reading and rereading. Rhodes is the real deal, and The Perfume of Pain deserves a wide audience.
-Jay Parini, author of New and Collected Poems: 1975-2015
I opened Perfume of Pain from a place of darkness but came away with something richer than light. The poems exploring the loss of the poet's husband are among the most profoundly honest and beautiful words about grief I have read. "It's always a pull between dirt and heaven, this boneyard life," Rhodes writes. This collection will put you in the middle of that tug-of-war, where we are the most human.
-Tania Runyan, author of Second Sky and What Will Soon Take Place
Related Subjects
Poetry