In her third collection, A Play of Mirrors. Ann Holmes keeps surprising us with her way of looking at things and we enjoy wondering where her poems will take us next. They bear a touch of the surreal, as in Visitor, where Jesus barges into a friends shower stall or in Snowbirds, where a red-tailed hawk dives out of an oversize/ page of my Audubon book. Her poems deftly avoid sentimentality. In A Slice of Moonlight, we find her searching her left forearm/ for the/indelible/ stain of/ invisible/ numbers and in On the Day, she matter-of-factly foresees the day when today/will not become yesterday. Often, she plays with form on the page, as in Wordless, in which the words themselves contradict the title as they swirl down the page as if carried on a breeze. A painter as well as a poet, Holmes love of art, of shapes and words, shines through this collection as she explores the sounds and meaning of words. These are brief tight poems brimming with wry humor and a lively imagination. There is no end to what interests this poet.
Peggy Heinrich, author, Forward Moving Shadows and Peeling an Orange.
Om författaren
Ann Holmes is a poet and painter living in Ann Arbor, Michigan. She attended Bennington College and received her BA from Sarah Lawrence College and a Doctorate in Art Education from New York University. She returned to Sarah Lawrence for an MFA in Poetry. She has published two poetry collections, Shards (Turn of the River Press, 2004) and A Leaf Called Socrates (i Universe, 2011). Her poems have appeared in Poetry Magazine Online, Asian Pacific Journal, The Connecticut River Review, and other journals.