Long Alabama Summer by Katherine Perry

(1 customer review)

$19.99

 

I have followed Katherine Perry’s poetry since 2011, watched her work grow in power and confidence over the years.  LONG ALABAMA SUMMER demonstrates her ability to write strong and sensual poems that are rich in the specifics of her Southern environment but relatable for many readers, especially women. She is not afraid to deal in fine poems with the contradictions and constrictions of racism.

–Marge Piercy

 

Katherine D. Perry introduces her debut collection of poems by telling readers about her first literary love: Sylvia Plath. And Plath indeed haunts the material of Perry’s work throughout, not only in the sincerity and forthright honesty of the poems but in the very fabric of the poems’ construction, music, and eloquence. These are poems that make the reader ache, that pull at the threads of who we are and who we were and the memories that make us. Perry’s work incorporates bold and courageous subject matter inside a quiet rhythmic beauty that stands apart from a good deal of the contemporary work being published today, which all-too-often uses syntactical experimentation and showmanship at the cost of truly connecting to the reader. You will read these poems and you will want more of Perry’s work. And you will want to know Katherine D. Perry, the author of such beauty, such raw honesty, such forthright talent borne of memory and experience. Perry is the real McCoy. I hope this will be the first of many books to come.

–Andrea Witzke Slot, author of To Find a New Beauty

 

 

 

 

Description

Long Alabama Summer

by Katherine D. Perry

$19.99, Full-length, paper

Katherine D. Perry teaches literature and writing at Georgia State University’s Perimeter College.  She is also a founding coordinator of their Prison Education Project and often teaches poetry writing to incarcerated students. Born and raised in Alabama, she now lives in a historic home in Decatur, Georgia with her spouse, two children, and dog.  History sometimes consumes her thoughts.

 

 

1 review for Long Alabama Summer by Katherine Perry

  1. Abused being

    After listening to the true story of the Brothers life struggles, I understand and can read between the lines of this book. Hiding behind what ever seems to block the truth to just make it OK. Its not ok. It’s not okay to keep struggles to hide behind the truth. The out come came to a crippling halt,and the result was total horror. To hide in a cave and act as if it never happened and hopes that it may just go away. Sadly many have been stripped of there dignity,and hidden behind the closed doors of abuse.

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