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Today's poem is "Freedom"
from You Are Still Alive

42 Miles Press

William Stobb's "Freedom" is from his sixth poetry collection, You Are Still Alive (2019, 42 Miles Books). He is the also the author of the National Poetry Series selection, Nervous Systems, and Absentia, both in the Penguin Poets series. Stobb works on the editorial staff of Conduit and its book-publishing arm, Conduit Books and Ephemera, and he teaches as part of the creative writing faculty at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse.

Other poems by William Stobb in Verse Daily:
June 9, 2015:   "Interval" "It shouldn't be rare, this ability..."
November 12, 2011:   "Poem Asleep" "Native flora regain their dominance..."

Books by William Stobb:

Other poems on the web by William Stobb:
Four poems
Four poems
Two poems

William Stobb's Website.

William Stobb According to Wikipedia.

About You Are Still Alive:

"Each poem in YOU ARE STILL ALIVE introduces itself with wistful, comic nihilism, but grows into a compassionate, fearless friend. It's as though the reader had been dropped into the mind of a loving, funny, humble, infinitely generous, nimble-minded Buddhist monk brought up on classic science fiction. The monk's musings honor the marvelous strangeness of each passing moment, never losing sight of the yawning maw of the dubious future. His contemplations are both heartening and sobering. The poems' animated cosmic hospitality bring our greatest and smallest concerns into perfectly calibrated relation as they ponder consciousness, technology, freedom, the future, the worldly, how to lead a virtuous life without being an annoying prig, how flawed and destructive humans are, how to be inventively fair-minded in at least five dimensions, and what life forms might come after us, stumbling on the ruins of our so-called civilization."
—Amy Gerstler

"William Stobb's work moves elegantly between restlessness and peace, an appreciation for the bizarreness of life and a desire for simplicity. In balancing these extremes, his poems create a feeling of movement toward reconciliation, if not its realization. To repurpose his own words, he builds a space in which the 'emotional life / inflected by the brightness of wit / puts its arm around the intellect.' This book is a rare and beautiful accomplishment."
—Bob Hicok



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