Gina María Balibrera – Michigan Quarterly Review

Gina María Balibrera

Image of the cover of H.R. Webster's book What Follows over an abstract background.

A Review of H.R. Webster’s What Follows

H.R. Webster’s What Follows is a book of abolitionist love poems. It’s about the long fight of love, elegiac love, about loving the rough, bruised contours of love, about the shedding of systems that are not love. What makes us good, Webster argues, is not our purity or our fear. These poems make room for […]

A Review of H.R. Webster’s What Follows Read More »

H.R. Webster’s What Follows is a book of abolitionist love poems. It’s about the long fight of love, elegiac love, about loving the rough, bruised contours of love, about the shedding of systems that are not love. What makes us good, Webster argues, is not our purity or our fear. These poems make room for

A Review of Sarah Heady’s Comfort

When poet Sarah Heady was a writer-in-residence at Art Farm in Marquette, Nebraska, she found a pile of magazines in the attic of the farmhouse where she was staying. She discovered that these were issues of a women’s magazine called Comfort that had been published between 1888 and 1942. Its tagline read “The Key to

A Review of Sarah Heady’s Comfort Read More »

When poet Sarah Heady was a writer-in-residence at Art Farm in Marquette, Nebraska, she found a pile of magazines in the attic of the farmhouse where she was staying. She discovered that these were issues of a women’s magazine called Comfort that had been published between 1888 and 1942. Its tagline read “The Key to

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