David Lee Garrison, author of Playing Bach in the D.C. Metro and Light in the River
In Anne Randolph's poetry collection you will meet cedar waxwings, red-brown thrashers and purple finches. And flowers: blazing star, butterfly weed and rare dwarf larkspur, their very names poems. But she doesn't neglect human nature, including detailed portraits of the villagers she loves, a few whom she's lost. Her poetry is thoroughly accessible, recreating the natural world of her little part of west-central Ohio. In the course of the book's five artfully-arranged chapters, we travel from the mystical wild backyard of her Ohio village to the English peaks and back. Randolph abundantly characterizes "this silent symphony, this astonishing dance" of life in its infinite, astonishing variety.
Ed Davis, author of Time of the Light and The Psalms of Israel Jones
Poet Anne Randolph brings to mind Mary Oliver in her ecstatic embrace of the natural world, her wonder and appreciation for gardens and woods, coyotes and monarchs, fireflies and constellations. In "This is What Life Does," Randolph focuses her keen gaze and graceful language on not only the natural world, but also the pleasures of small-town life, the passage of time, and the surprise of a late-life love. These poems are illuminating, big-hearted and wise.
Diane Chiddister, author of One More Day
Related Subjects
Poetry