A summer of Fireflies, mason jars, and quiet miracles in the hills of Appalachia.
This poetry collection by Alex Hall gathers the sights, scents, and sounds of small-town life with tenderness and clarity. Fireflies open the book and close it, and they glow through the middle too, a living thread that ties together kitchens and porches, fields and back roads, storms and still evenings. Each poem feels like a jar set on the windowsill to keep a little more light.
Inside these pages you will find country kitchens and canning days, screen doors and July thunderheads, goldenrod and barn lots, the shine of a road after rain, the hush of family stories told in low voices. The language is vivid and accessible, the images comforting and fresh, the emotions steady enough to return to again and again.
Why readers love this book:
- Appalachian nature poems that feel immediate and true
- A strong sense of place anchored by recurring Fireflies
- Nostalgia that invites, not overwhelms
- Clear, musical lines that read beautifully aloud
- Scene after scene you can see, smell, and taste
Perfect for readers of Mary Oliver, Wendell Berry, and anyone who keeps a shelf for place-based poetry, Southern memory, and the quiet work of love. If you have ever wanted to hold a July evening a little longer, open this book. Let the lids seal. Let the Fireflies keep shining.
Related Subjects
Poetry