-Eleanor Wilner
Elizabeth Bodien's Blood, Metal, Fiber, Rock transports the reader to a world where "the moon is full, the deep road is calling," where "the light has enveloped her, / taken her in / to its delicate story," and "earth pulls all else down to it," always reminding us, "My task's to bear the beauty." Bodien's poetry is mythic and lyrical, mournful, playful, and plaintive. She writes with striking authority and originality.
-Ernest Hilbert, author of Caligulan
As I read through this sweeping panorama of the human condition expressed through various voices, I am overwhelmed by the talent. I was struck by the musicality of the lines, the metric schemes, and the use of both form and narrative structures, also the rich images and complexities of thought which make Blood, Metal, Fiber, Rock by an immensely skilled poet an exciting read. One of my favorite form poems, "Blue Boy," is a fine example of why you should read Bodien's poems aloud. "Blue boy sits like stone beside the water / sinking into reverie, discovering / new joy there at dawn by water's sparkle, / twinkling, twinkling as if stars had fallen...."
-Nancy Scott, author of Ah, Men and Running Down Broken Cement
Related Subjects
Poetry