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Today's poem is "It's Raining Spiders in Brazil"
from Harsh Realm

Indolent Books

Daniel Nester is the author most recently of the poetry collection Harsh Realm: My 1990s (Indolent Books). Other books include God Save My Queen, Shader, and How to Be Inappropriate. His work has appeared in New York Times, Buzzfeed, The Atlantic, The American Poetry Review, The Best American Poetry, Bennington Review, Court Green, and other places. He is a professor of English at The College of Saint Rose, and is the editor of Pine Hills Review.

Books by Daniel Nester:

Other poems on the web by Daniel Nester:
Nine poems
"Nostalgia Ain't What It Used to Be"
"The Prophet's Song"
Three poems
Two poems
Seventeen poems
Four poems
"Prodigies"
"I met Liz Phair once,"
"Road House Monologue"
"Semi-Insane Arietta"

Daniel Nester's Website.

Daniel Nester on Twitter.

About Harsh Realm:

"'All I've ever done is sing along,' writes Daniel Nester in Harsh Realm. Equal parts music ethnography, punk protest, and homage to the New York School, this ingenious collection takes us on a rollicking tour of the 'layered decade' of the 90s to the present day with remixed poems that refuse nostalgia and ironic detachment to deliver up the real miracle: an anthem with the power to save."
—Virginia Konchan

"Daniel Nester's Harsh Realm is a mixtape of poems weirdly paired with songs of the time, like playing TLC's 'Waterfalls' on repeat while waiting for the results of his first AIDS test. Nester describes with love the shifting trends in 90s music, and explores his own emerging sense of self, part young poser, part earnest observer of the New York City poetry and punk scenes. From the fall of the Berlin Wall to an Irish bar in the West Village, Nester details with humor and vulnerability his own emergence into adulthood. Word to your mother."
—Tracey Knapp

"Daniel Nester's Harsh Realm is a masterpiece of poetic time travel that lets us breathe differently, breathe into a time that has no beginning or middle or end; time that is an orb of music and emotion and language and heartbeat and that comes out of an unquenchable desire to love. Daniel Nester is working at his highest poetic powers in these poems."
—Matthew Lippman



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