®

Today's poem is "The Eyes Have Woods"
from Creature Sounds Fade

Black Lawrence Press

Shanna Compton is the author of Creature Sounds Fade (Black Lawrence, 2020), Brink (Bloof, 2013), For Girls & Other Poems (Bloof, 2008), Down Spooky (Winnow, 2005), and is currently at work on a book-length speculative poem, The Hazard Cycle. New poems have recently appeared or are forthcoming in the Nation, the American Poetry Review, the Academy of American Poets Poem-a-Day series, jubilat, Bennington Review, and elsewhere. She works as a freelance book designer and editor in Lambertville, NJ.

Other poems by Shanna Compton in Verse Daily:
January 8, 2020:   "Seven Steps to Better Listening" "We perceive difference..."
January 21, 2013:   "Hospital for the Ear & Neck" "Setting and receiving tones..."

Books by Shanna Compton:

Other poems on the web by Shanna Compton:
"The Arson Prevention Program"
Two poems
"Congregation at the River"
Three poems
Three poems
Two poems
"Rethinking Monster Island"
Five poems
Three poems
Three poems

Shanna Compton's Website.

Shanna Compton According to Wikipedia.

Shanna Compton on Twitter.

About Creature Sounds Fade:

"This collection is, from the get-go, parenthetical, by which I mean layered horizontally in voice, architecture, inflection, and sound—the sound of the ever-fading world, and the soundtrack of the human interior. The tone is a shimmering dread with a backbeat of wonder, and the reigning approach to the line is the caesura—gaps, silences, and redactions. Everything teeters, transmogrifies; even the speaker's dress shifts from 'delicate bushbean pink' to 'tufted crest titmouse gray' and then into something like song: 'My dress my dress/o mess of shabbiness…' Shanna Compton has managed to write poems that are utterly of the moment—'Oh vomitous intimacy!'— while harkening back to archetype, to the timeless strangeness of the natural world, imagination's source: 'the river/ the gold-green blur of trees,' steadying, sweet, a 'clear rivulet of water across the sandy waste.' This collection met my thirst right where it lives. 'Fellow navigators,' I urge you to read it."
—Diane Seuss

"Poems in Creature Sounds Fade slip through cracks into other worlds a little unfamiliar and they insist on the urgency of making what is unfamiliar familiar. You have to see how these poems sound in your head. As private and public exchange places with one another, we're let in to Compton's poems, we're invited to provide the variable."
—Dara Wier

"Shanna Compton's poems turn corners you wouldn't know were there if she weren't listening for them, locating them in order to give them away, listening to what's there and what's left out. Her astonishing feel, sound by sound, for shapeliness sprung from the edges and detail of lived experience, and her intense commitment to deep listening, are antidotes for and tough pushback against the constant threat of total immobility we all face every day."
—Anselm Berrigan



Support Verse Daily
Sponsor Verse Daily!

Home 
Archives  Web Weekly Features  Support Verse Daily  About Verse Daily  FAQs  Submit to Verse Daily  Follow Verse Daily on Twitter

Copyright © 2002-2021 Verse Daily All Rights Reserved