TC Tolbert, Tucson Poet Laureate
What the Gargoyle Sees pairs creative settings with a realist's eye-the book is full of moving poems that put Twaronite's contemporary sensibility in settings rooted in myth, history, and invention. From the interstellar to the metaphysical, the poems take their occasions imaginatively-but rarely remain in the imagination alone. Instead, Twaronite melds the fabular with the particulars of lived experience. What the gargoyle truly sees, in the end, is the world we've made. It is what I like most about these poems: the way they start in the ether but find meaning in the heart.
Tyler J. Meier, Executive Director, University of Arizona Poetry Center
From the poignancy of what the gargoyle sees of the children in the war-torn streets below to the magic glow you can experience in four o'clock light when reason gives way to wonder, Gene's poetry can often be surprising and thought-provoking, yet written with an honest simplicity that makes them so enjoyable to read. As the yellow snake says for Gene, "I only wanted to tell you] a story to live in for a time and forget."
Susan Shell Winston, Editor at NewMyths.com & Author of Singer of Norgondy
Related Subjects
Poetry