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Today's poem is "They Come"
from Hue & Cry

MadHat Press

Diane K. Martin's poems have appeared in American Poetry Review, diode, Field, Laurel Review, Plume, Rhino, River Styx, and many other journals and anthologies. One of her poems received a Pushcart Special Mention; another won the poetry prize from Smartish Pace; and another won second place in the Pablo Neruda Prize from Nimrod Journal. Her first collection, Conjugated Visits, a National Poetry Series finalist, was published by Dream Horse Press. Her second collection, Hue & Cry, was published in March 2020 by MadHat Press. She lives in western Sonoma County, California.

Other poems by Diane K. Martin in Verse Daily:
July 5, 2010:   "Demimonde" "She writes with lavender ink on cream vellum. A crow..."

Books by Diane K. Martin:

Other poems on the web by Diane K. Martin:
Five poems
Fifteen poems
Two poems
Two poems
"Angle of Incidence"

Diane K. Martin's Website.

About Hue & Cry:

"Diane Martin's wonderful new collection Hue & Cry is alarmingly full of lines, images and observations I dearly wish I had written myself. The varied speakers of these poems are pithy, down to earth, and winningly direct in their wisdoms, as well as eloquent, colloquial, tender, occasionally bawdy, and very much full of surprise. With most contemporary poetry, too often I know where I'm going well before I get there. That couldn't be less the case with this terrific book. Martin has a serious gift for precise, textured, and dynamic language, and her keen habit of seeing the world slant makes these poems feel very much alive. This book woke me up, and I feel pretty certain it'll do the same for you."
—Erin Belieu

"You already know what happens between breakfast and dinner writes Diane K. Martin in Hue & Cry. Her language doesn't reconfigure the quotidian; it engages with the fire and shadows left in the wake of love, memory, grief—the wreckage of living. This concern with consequence is most visible in an astonishing series in the voices of the women Picasso painted. These persona poems challenge and complicate our notions of the Muse.… fine-sculpted; line after line resonates with grace and elegance."
—Eduardo Corral

"In their economy and range, Diane Martin's poems show us connections and affinities we had not anticipated, dazzling us, intriguing us, and keeping us off balance. We read them with delight: poems that spin, dance, leap, and generate insight continuously."
—David Young



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