• Apples 2472
  • Apples 2900
  • Apples 459
  • Apples 9787
  • Creatures Among Us

    Creatures Among Us

    The ninth collection of poetry by Rebecca Lilly. Creatures Among Us is a spellbinding tumble into a mirror reality where the “creatures among us” include our other possible selves.
    Strange practices I’m acquainted with! One part of myself, a crazed character, talks to another in an alphabetical degeneration. It’s not the way of the shaman, but my own signature dialogue. In the poem “An Abstract Piece” an imagined work of art is described “As if you’d dipped your foot in quicksand / lit with fairy dust… / No book could do / it justice.” That’s an apt description for this collection as well, except this book does do justice to Rebecca Lilly’s fantastical visions, which are indeed shamanic. Physics tells us that could be other universes parallel to our own, and to open this book is to stumble headlong into just such a universe, a strange and yet strangely familiar world of mirrors, shadows, and doppelgangers, where the “creatures among us” are often our other possible selves. That these realms seem so reasonable, so fully realized, is a triumph of Lilly’s language, which is in every sense of the word spell-binding. There are also many appearances of graveyards and funeral parlors and their functionaries, the instrumentalities of death, but never merely morbid, more another indication of commerce between worlds – like “The Stone” which is described as a peephole on the cosmos, holding the sun’s heat even as it darkens– a remnant of its previous life when the stone was a star. And what of the one who conjures these visions? “I’ve always been a fan of Grimm adages”, she admits at one point, and appropriately she returns to this fairy tale world in the closing lines, where, as the “Lady of Antiquity,” she says of herself I’m no queen. More a jack of all trades, or a wolf in the bonnet and dress of an old maid. Don’t let her disguise fool you – this is a cunning, audaciously original work, and world.
    $16.00
  • Elements of Life

    Elements of Life

    Shortlisted for the Touchstone Distinguished Books Award 2014 by The Haiku Foundation!

    Rebecca Lilly’s new volume is actually two volumes in one. Book 1, edited by Allan Burns, shows the poet reaching a concluding phase of her exploration of a more normative style of haiku, well ensconced within the American haiku tradition. Flip the book over, however, and a darker and more idiosyncratic Book 2 displays an entirely different sensibility in what may well become her signature style. As Lilly writes in her introduction, “In conceiving of and composing Book 2, what seemed paramount in my mind was the circularity of the four elements, their interdependence reflected in how each transforms into, or is nourished by, the other elements in an ever-evolving cycle, as well as the attempt to find a balance, in body and mind, among the energies represented by each.” You’ll be fascinated to share her discoveries with her through this one-of-a-kind presentation.

    $20.00
  • Evergreen Moon

    Evergreen Moon

    Rebecca Lilly’s several previous volumes have explored her immediate environs, and the circumstances of coming to (meta-)physical as well as geographical terms in these places. Evergreen Moon takes this a step farther, serving as a contemplation of the poet’s ancestral home, at the time of her imminent departure from it. For it she devises an innovative style, pairing a traditional haiku with a freer poem that is the figure to the haiku’s ground. The result is quite unlike anything else you will have read. This is a move you will want to make with her.

    $20.00
  • Indoor Roses 144

    Indoor Roses 144

    $1.00
  • Indoor Roses 186

    Indoor Roses 186

    $1.00
  • Indoor Roses 207

    Indoor Roses 207

    $1.00
  • Indoor Roses 226

    Indoor Roses 226

    $1.00
  • Indoor Roses 230

    Indoor Roses 230

    $1.00