The Boxwood Maze by Jim Smith

$22.99

 

Somewhere between “Stay where you are,” the command that opens the book, and “Please file calmly out the door,” the instruction that closes it, Jim Smith’s triumphant debut, The Boxwood Maze, rolls out like a daydream one might have while waiting for the train doors to open, that instant between standing still and the initiation of a footstep.  As much a poet of the comics as of the trauma scars of combat, Smith builds worlds of television spectacles and breakfast cereals, ice hotels and eclipses, presented not merely as experiments of the imagination, not merely for the awe and astonishment, though there’s that; as I read his poems I feel that I have touched down outside of time, given a day pass in the metaphor factory of the deep unconscious, where every poem is a box in which “You’ll go one way.  I’ll go another. / Sometimes running into each other.” And “around a corner, the monster.”  If ever there were a poet of the late night flick or the dime store kite, it would be the inimitable Jim Smith.  He is one of my favorite writers.   

–David Keplinger, author of Ice 

 

What do we find inside Jim Smith’s The Boxwood Maze?  A life long and richly lived, closely observed, and winningly captured in poetry.  Widely allusive, the poems take us through history and memory; song, sadness, and celebration; heart-aches literal and figurative, “a cloud or some dragon [swallowing] the sun”; “a leaden night without a moon.”  Too, Smith gives us strong measures of wry humor and hope played out in beautiful images and the occasional, artful foray into poetic form: pantoum, sonnet, ghazanelle. “The sun reappears from her devious eclipse; / wickedly laughing she parts the curtain of lace.”   

–Moira Egan, author of The Furies  

 

The Boxwood Maze – what an apt title for Jim Smith’s elegant debut poetry collection.  Whimsical yet heartfelt, Smith’s voice is clear of eye and voice.  Written in both free verse and form, his poems explore the wonders of being human in these challenging times.  In his graceful opening poem, “The Boxwood Maze,” he traces a love relationship’s complicated course:  Smith does not hesitate to treat cultural icons with irreverence.  In “The Well,” Smith uses the metaphor of his little sister’s favorite TV show, Lassie, to illuminate sibling rivalry.  Later poems interrogate Smith’s war veteran experience with authenticity and wisdom.   

–Ellen Sazzman, author of The Shomer and Wild Irish Yenta  

 

 

 

 

 

Description


The Boxwood Maze

by Jim Smith

Full-length, Paper

979-8-89990-358-8

2026

This title will be released on February 20, 2026

With a dash of humor, Jim Smith takes us through a life constantly surprising and strangeThese poems follow him through a bucolic 1950’s childhood, to college in the 1960’s, then to war in Southeast Asia, and a long life trying to understand it allIn a whimsical and authentic voice, he asks, What just happened?  Caring and searching for meaning, Jim takes us deep into his own boxwood maze This is his first published collection.   

Jim Smith has finally put together a whimsical and curious account of his life growing up at Longwood Gardens in the 1950’s, through Villanova and Vietnam in the 1960’s, and then into the mysteries of love, romance, and poetry.  In lively verse, he proposes that this world is puzzling and strange, but well worth embracing.  He lives with his wife the artist Phyllis Mayes in Silver Spring MD.  The Boxwood Maze is his debut poetry collection.   

 

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