This poem ranges between funny and sad, between obvious and breathtaking, with the same kind of strange logic that books cluster and accumulate. A passage:
This chapbook was set in type and printed by hand, by Larry Levis’s then-
wife, the poet Marcia Southwick, in 1975. It’s 1997 now and Larry’s
dead — too early, way too early — and this elliptical, heartbreaking poem
(which is, in part, exactly about too early death) keeps speaking to me
from its teal-green cover: the way they say the nails and the hair
continue to grow in the grave.
This book is two wings and a thorax the size of a sunflower seed.

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