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Today's poem is "Spring on the Yellowstone"
from The Horse Who Bears Me Away

Red Hen Press

Jim Peterson is the author of six collections of poetry, three chapbooks, numerous plays, and a novel, Paper Crown, published by Red Hen Press and recently made available on Audible. His poetry collection The Owning Stone won Red Hen Press's Benjamin Saltman Award for 1999. His newest collection, Speech Minus Applause, was released by Press 53 in 2019. His poems have appeared widely in journals including Poetry, Georgia Review, Shenandoah, Poetry Northwest, Prairie Schooner, and many others. His stories have appeared in the Los Angeles Review, South Dakota Review, and The Laurel Review. A collection of stories, Many Small Fires, is forthcoming from Red Hen Press. Retired Coordinator of Creative Writing at Randolph College, he is on the faculty of the University of Nebraska-Omaha Low-Res MFA Program in Creative Writing. He lives with his charismatic corgi, Mama Kilya, in Lynchburg, Virginia.

Books by Jim Peterson:

Other poems on the web by Jim Peterson:
"Following You"

About The Horse Who Bears Me Away:

"Jim Peterson's poems arise from that place where the world we know touches against the world we have always suspected might be there. In this place, we hear the wind 'lisping her two or three words / of prolonged astonishment.' A dream becomes 'the body of a forest.' I have been a follower of Jim Peterson's work for almost four decades and have rarely read a poem of his that did not surprise me. The poems in The Horse Who Bears Me Away are no exception. In flights of lyric glory and narratives that gallop heedlessly forward, these poems offer the delight of 'knowing who we are and who we'll never be.' Here are new delights. Draw close and savor them."
—Al Maginnes

"This is the work of a mature poet who has risen to new heights. There's heartbreaking beauty in these words--and in the feelings and insights behind them. On page after page, Jim Peterson grabs the treacherous, turning world by the throat and forces out its secrets. If you want to know what poetry can do for the spirit, read this book. Then read it again, and be even more thankful."
—Clint McCown

"The poems in Jim Peterson's The Horse Who Bears Me Away live and breathe within the world of flesh, through bodies that discover and rediscover themselves in strange and miraculous ways. Voices, too, animate these pages--the voices of laid-off laborers, hobos, crows, cougars, slash pines, wind 'voicing its concern,' mockingbirds, lost and dying friends, and waitresses in places where 'hands know their roles by heart.' From the stunning prologue, where the speaker merges with the body and spirit of a horse, to the epilogue, in which a dream strips him bare 'as if fresh from creation,' Peterson invites us, his lucky readers, 'to ease into these hands and feet, / pulling this body on like an old coat / that was made for you.'"
—Rebecca McClanahan



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