Define About Books The Well Speaks of Its Own Poison
| Title | : | The Well Speaks of Its Own Poison |
| Author | : | Maggie Smith |
| Book Format | : | Paperback |
| Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 80 pages |
| Published | : | April 1st 2015 by Tupelo Press |
| Categories | : | Poetry. Fantasy. Fairy Tales |

Maggie Smith
Paperback | Pages: 80 pages Rating: 4.44 | 180 Users | 40 Reviews
Narration Conducive To Books The Well Speaks of Its Own Poison
Delving into the depths of fairy tales to transform the daily into encounters with the marvelous but dangerous, Maggie Smith’s poems question whether the realms of imagination and story can possibly be safe. Even as her compressed stories are unfolding on a suburban cul de sac, they are deep in the mythical woods, “where children, despite their commonness, / are a delicacy.”Declare Books Toward The Well Speaks of Its Own Poison
| Edition Language: | English |
Rating About Books The Well Speaks of Its Own Poison
Ratings: 4.44 From 180 Users | 40 ReviewsRate About Books The Well Speaks of Its Own Poison
Maggie Smith, author of 2012 Dorset Prize winner, The Well Speaks of its Own Poison, was born in Columbus, Ohio. She boasts a list of respectable awards such as the winner of the Benjamin Saltman Poetry award for Lamp of the Body, and the winner of the Pudding House Chapbook Competition for Nesting Dolls. With such amazing achievements behind her name, its no wonder that Maggie Smiths The Well Speaks of its Own Poison came out as another winner.The Well Speaks of its Own Poison is a full-lengthIn The Well Speaks of Its Own Poison, the winner of the 2012 Dorset Prize, Maggie Smith spins hauntingly beautiful tales that explore growing up, discovering oneself, and the disillusionment that follows. Many of Smiths poems capture moments of childhood in todays society, but some retell old fairy tales with grotesque modern twists. By shifting between modern and surreal fairy tale settings, Smiths poems cast the reader into a dreamlike realm, where the line between illusion and reality blurs.

I have followed Maggie Smith on twitter for at least a year and I have read her most recent collection Good Bones, which is very nature based. The Well, although it includes nature and nature imagery & symbolism, is much darker. The collection is a twist, a reimagining of the fable/fairy tale genre, but the Grimm Brothers tales and not the Disney ones. The poems are very accessible and would be interesting to really analyze in terms of the fable/fairy tale genre. Im just having a difficult
The reader warms to this book like a body in a tepid bath to which hotter water is added little by little, until slowly and without realizing it, steam rises all around and all you want to do is sink deeper into the cascade and melt of the words, bubbling and languorous, eerie, foggy, Big Bad Wolf-y, a dark, rich, immersive forest-tub of poetry from which you never want to emerge.
This wonderful collection of magical poems, many inspired by folklore, took me into new worlds and (at the risk of sounding trite!) connected me with my soul. The majority of the poems were so deeply moving, they touched me on a profound level. I have followed Maggie Smith on Twitter for a while and feel very grateful to have discovered such a writer.
What a delightful, magical poetry collection, filled with fairy tales you almost recognize and children you want so badly to save and language that explodes outward in every direction. Enchanting and scary and gripping from the first to the very last poem.


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