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· 2015
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· 2018
A new novel by poet and author Peggy Aylsworth Levine It deals with a young woman working inNew York city during WW II. She is a poet, composing a blank verse play focusing on women'sstruggle as artists. The language of the novel has a poetic bent.
· 2016
The poetry of Peggy Aylsworth happens in the everyday, in which "rent has been paid, breakfast dishes washed," and shall she take a bath or "read the sorry news" or sit down with Wittgenstein--or is this the day a daughter dies? Is this the day she herself may "die with questions/ slipping, slipping from my hands"? Her poems are quietly, precisely amazed at an everyday in which, really, anything may happen. I'm reading along through these poems, a poetry etched in what seems a comparatively quiet life, and I hit a verse that begins, "Because the inevitable makes mistakes"--and that stops me cold. I sit thinking, "Of course it does " And say the line over to myself several times, liking that it begins rather than ends a movement of thought. So quiet, these poems--but urgent, too. Their time is right now, their place is right here, their past is everywhere, their future is as certain as it is uncertain. Aylsworth's lyric sense does not fear letting in the world that we don't like, the world we read about and see on TV and that we hope won't explode too near. She takes on being a poet of that world, too. The poetry of Peggy Aylsworth calmly recognizes, without the need of sweeping gestures, that to be a fully-realized hu- man being means to reclaim one's humanity every day in the face of whatever. "What goes unnoticed/cheats the soul." And there's this: A poem like "Time And Its Relatives" makes cowards of most of us.
· 2017
The best in poetry and short stories Clover's editors can find. Based in Bellingham, WA, this all word publication features writers from all over the globe. Fresh, innovative and relentless in its independence.
· 2017
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· 2016
· 2013
This lyric poetry presents, in a variety of tone and style, a unique slant on how a ragged man might feel as he suddenly sees a vision of his lost love; the long wait for a reply; a move through a day of uncertainty. Here are the opposing elements, the mystery: how light, nature, art can open our perception to new ways of seeing.