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Today's poem is "Red State"
from The Book of Dirt

NYQ Books

Nicole Santalucia is the author of The Book of Dirt (NYQ Books), Spoiled Meat (Headmistress Press), and Because I Did Not Die (Bordighera Press). She is a recipient of the Charlotte Mew Chapbook Prize and the Edna St. Vincent Millay Poetry Prize. Her work has appeared in publications such as The Best American Poetry, The Cincinnati Review, The Rumpus, The Boiler Journal, diode, as well as other places. She teaches at Shippensburg University in Pennsylvania.

Books by Nicole Santalucia:

Other poems on the web by Nicole Santalucia:
Two poems
Three poems

Nicole Santalucia on Twitter.

About The Book of Dirt:

"I've never read a book like The Book of Dirt. Stunning in original voice, Nicole Santalucia conjures elemental imagery that runs underground and trespasses all borders. In "Keystone Ode with Homophobia and Ground Beef in It" Santalucia writes: "What I am is not on your list of sins [...] This is how the guntothetemple says Hail Mary. / No queers get out of here alive." These poems give brilliant voice to the lives of women and what it means to survive in the middle of addiction, prison, women-hating, homophobia—in the farm fields of Pennsylvania. From the wreckage rises Santalucia's unflinching and beautiful song. This is a necessary book."
—Jan Beatty

"Nicole Santalucia's The Book of Dirt is an unsettling journey through a small-town American landscape where gun violence, homophobia, misogyny, and addiction permeate every corner, even though "there are no corners to turn." The terrain is littered with "broken hands and broken heads" and "soldiers brushing their hair with bones," but somehow Santalucia's tough, queer, and often grimly humorous voice generates a few sparks of hope that she might find or invent "a silent place to love," a place where strength derives not from violence, but from poetry. This isn't a comforting book, but why would it be."
—Mark Bibbins

"This is the book where a gay girl is in another closet," Nicole Santalucia writes in her vivacious volume The Book of Dirt. It is a very capacious closet, with a wardrobe to enhance a naturally engaging personality with the gift of gab and an attitude of fearless defiance: "On the way to heaven / I'll probably get pulled over / by the cops. I'll scratch the blue / paint and try to pick the lock." Nicole's poems are always lively, often funny, not infrequently Pennsylvania-specific, and sometimes all three at once. She has a great time with "bitch" as a term and a concept—see her "Bitchtown, Pennsylvania"—and wields a sense of satirical humor like that of Nin Andrews. Nicole Santalucia's poems reflect the wit and the will of a soul that has been saved by marriage, sobriety, and the magic of poetry."
—David Lehman



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