Joe Newberry, musician, and songwriter
Jim Zola's poems, often dreamy and nostalgic, are concerned with beauty and sadness and yearning for what we know, but can't entirely see or say. Through powerful image-making and original language, the poet weaves emotional textures, the parts of the experience that are so hard to pin down and that make poetry so necessary. Zola is preoccupied with accessing and articulating what's true-the essential, and the enduring. If there is a theme here, it could well be that "No one easily survives love," as the poet says. Elsewhere, he tells us, "I practice love by call and response." I would add that these poems call out to us, and we cannot help but respond.- Antonia Clark, author of Chameleon Moon and Dance Craze
Related Subjects
Poetry