Drought by Nancy Botkin Early on the heart recoils, learns to mistrust. How much is too much? With one foot pressed against the truck fender, Or— And the lover— The heart here flushed Nancy Botkin was born in Detroit and spent her youth in Michigan. Her poems have appeared in numerous journals including Poetry, Poetry East, The Midwest Quarterly, Passages North, and South Dakota Review. Her chapbook, Signs of Life, was published by No Exit Press in 1999. Nancy lives in South Bend , Indiana, with her husband and teaches freshman composition and creative writing at Indiana University South Bend. Updated 3/30/07 |
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Nancy Botkin (Indiana) Poetry. Paper, perfect bound, 72 pp. Beautifully honest and heartbreaking, Parts That Were Once Whole boldly exposes the human psyche. Botkin examines questions of mortality, consciousness, and the concept of self. Memories start as solid events and become fragmented over time; Botkin takes those fragments and creates a luminous image of what was once whole. Look for similar books by subject:
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