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Today's poem is "Negative"
from Wolf Trees

Able Muse Press

Katie Hartsock's second poetry collection Wolf Trees (Able Muse) was one of Kirkus Review's Best Indie Books of 2023. Her work appears in journals such as The Threepenny Review, Ecotone, Beloit Poetry Journal, Plume, Image, and RHINO. She is an associate professor of English at Oakland University in Michigan, and lives in Ann Arbor with her family.

Books by Katie Hartsock:

Other poems on the web by Katie Hartsock:
Five poems
"Tree Wolf"
"Studies in Devotion"
"Head of a Woman with the Horns of a Ram"
Two poems
"To the Iceman Otzi"
"Leaving the Forest"
"Download the App and We'll Plant a Tree"
"Archaeology"
"The Ducks on a Whiskey River Motel"
Five poems

Katie Hartsock's Website.

About Wolf Trees:

"Expanding from breast milk, stretch marks, and memories of miniskirts to the Farnese Hercules, the Homeric Hymn to Hermes, and, beautifully, in 'The Nipple Shield of Achilles,' to the Iliad, Katie Hartsock's urgent and capacious poems contain multitudes. In unexpected and compelling ways, many of these poems reach from an intimate focus to the realm of myth and legend. Hartsock's vision makes her poems ramify like the archetypal tree of her title—shape-shifting, endlessly generative, and radiant with meaning."
—Rachel Hadas

"Katie Hartsock is one wonderful poet. She is the abundantly gifted, skilled, and generous keeper of world myths who is constantly cleaning, repairing, and representing ancient wisdom to us as new salve and fresh cure for the world as it is right now. Wolf Trees is a gorgeous gathering of poems from one of America's brightest poetic voices."
—Lorna Goodison

"Wolf trees are tall mature trees that are not like the other trees—they stand out from their surroundings. The poems in Katie Hartsock's new collection are as strong, as enduring, as outstanding as the trees from which the book takes its title. These poems are assured, well rooted but with a light touch even as they address some of the deepest concerns we humans face. Our connections to the world around us are ever rooted in bodies, always leaky, ever changing, flawed and beautiful not despite but in large part because of those openings, those 'flaws.' The poems in Wolf Trees are about the becoming that is the human life, and they help us in the journey that is our own becoming."
—Jim Ferris



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