-William Y. Fellenberg, Yarnslingers Memoir Series and Hudson River Valley Poets
We live in the woods, I thought- "Butterfly Bushes." Bill Greenfield delights and moves the reader with his varied textured and multi-hued poetry in this wide-screened tableau of life and the intricacies of relationships living in rural Sullivan County, New York. Greenfield paints a gallery of hard-to-forget pictures of characters: "At the Grave of Alfred Bowers," "Lucy in the Woods, Dying," 'Dad' in "Broken Serve" and experience "Manitoba," "Autumn Song on the Rail Trail," "I will Sing to You Tomorrow." Robert Frost said that "a poem begins with a lump in the throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a lovesickness." Greenfield lives the truth of this description in The Circadian Fallacy.
-Fr. Bob Phelps, O.F.M. Cap.
Related Subjects
Poetry