Gorgeous cover art by Judy's friend Sally F. Piller and yet another beautiful cover design by Jeremy Luke. Inside, six more gorgeous illustrations and 20 "letter" poems.
Judith Roitman lives in Lawrence, Kansas. Her chapbook The stress of meaning: variations on a line of Susan Howe was published in 1997 by Standing Stones Press. A second chapbook, Diamond Notebooks, was published in 1998 by nominative press collective. A third chapbook, Slippage, was published in 1999 by Potes and Poets Press. Her book No Face: Selected and New was published in 2008 by First Intensity Press. Ku: a thumb book is forthcoming from Airfoil Chapbooks.
How to ORDER Hank's Original chappers?
This is so very simple that even news florists, food conceptualists, obedience
re-trained sincericists, and contractors paid to build among other things the
Occupy Poetry Foundation buildings can JUST DO IT!
re-trained sincericists, and contractors paid to build among other things the
Occupy Poetry Foundation buildings can JUST DO IT!
Send $7.00 + $2.00 postage = $9.00 for 1 book
Send $10.00 + $2.00 postage = $12.00 for 2 books
Send $12.00 + $2.00 postage = $14.00 for 3 books
Send $12.00 + $2.00 postage = $14.00 for 3 books
WHERE TO? Steve Tills, 107 Washington Street, Palmyra, New York 14522
Judy Roitman, in her study at her home in Lawrence, Kansas, where she has been teaching Math at KU for three decades, "one of the good ones," knows the score, feels for us "adjuncts" and "former adjuncts," is trustworthy, is cool, is devoted to her Zen discipline, discusses bizarre stuff with me that I think only mostly women (but for an occasional Gabriel Gudding or a Ken Warren) discuss, like "emotional maturity" and what "rewards" there are for experimental poetry writing. Cool!
Denise Low, Kansas Poet Laureate 2007-2009, wrote a rockin' review of Slackline here! It's heady, but spot on and clear. Give it a read! You'll end up wanting to take in MORE of BOTH these fine poets.
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| Judith Roitman |
Judy Roitman, in her study at her home in Lawrence, Kansas, where she has been teaching Math at KU for three decades, "one of the good ones," knows the score, feels for us "adjuncts" and "former adjuncts," is trustworthy, is cool, is devoted to her Zen discipline, discusses bizarre stuff with me that I think only mostly women (but for an occasional Gabriel Gudding or a Ken Warren) discuss, like "emotional maturity" and what "rewards" there are for experimental poetry writing. Cool!
Denise Low, Kansas Poet Laureate 2007-2009, wrote a rockin' review of Slackline here! It's heady, but spot on and clear. Give it a read! You'll end up wanting to take in MORE of BOTH these fine poets.


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