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Today's poem is "Rumors of the Solitary Pulse"
from Leave Me a Little Want

Terrapin Books

Beverly Burch's work has won a Lambda Literary Award, the John Ciardi Prize, the John Ciardi Prize, a Gival Poetry Prize and was a finalist for Audre Lorde Award. She has published four books of poetry, most recently Leave Me a Little Want (Terrapin Books). Her M.A. in Literature is from Wake Forest and her work appears in Gulf Coast, The S outhern Review, Four Way Review, Denver Quarterly, The Los Angeles Review, and New England Review. She grew up in Atlanta and lives now in Oakland, CA with her wife.

Other poems by Beverly Burch in Verse Daily:
June 12, 2021:   "Invocation for a Return Ticket" "Let her not think of birds as returned spirits..."

Other poems on the web by Beverly Burch:
"Destroyed Sonnets"
Three poems
Four poems
"Incantation to Avian Followers"
Four poems
"Lamentation for the Children"
"Incantation After the Storm"
"Loose Sonnet with Uncertain Tracks"
Three poems

Beverly Burch's Website.

About Leave Me a Little Want:

"In Burch's fourth poetry collection, Leave Me a Little Want, there is ferocious energy and tension in each poem as it fearlessly asks, 'What are we doing/on this wild planet?' I love this book and its urgent attention to language and form in the 'treacherous province' of our current times. Burch never turns away from the coexistence of the beautiful and the bloody, the tedious and the risky, and so I not only trust her, but feel jolted awake. In the words of Emily Dickinson, Burch is that writer 'out with lanterns looking for herself', always conscious that she has briefly slipped through the 'blessed aperture' into this world and, too soon, must slip out again. "
—Julia Levine

"In Beverly Burch's beautiful book is full of deeply sensory and shape-shifting sonnets. Each line is full of the world's heft, its hustled minutes, and its urgent joys. In imperatives and questions, riddles and rumors, and unholy green born again in mud, Burch shakes us awake with each line. Every day and every heartbeat is full of beauty and meaning here, and we are lucky enough to see the seasons through Burch's thoughtful and rapturous attention."
—Traci Brimhall

"In Leave Me a Little Want, Beverly Burch winds us through the past, the Ars poetica of life, and the natural world with so much hunger on the edge of bloom. These lush poems remind us of living a starstruck life—where splendor and grief bloom together as well as separately and everything yearning for its own fist of red petals. Leave Me a Little Want is rich with imagery, sonnets, broken sonnets, and a distinct voice questioning throughout: How do things just disappear? How will I face dying? Does the earth still want us? You will only discover the answers if you listen to these poems that whisper and sing to you—Shake things up...Go somewhere. It's all in here for you—confetti sunsets, sweet tranquility, lemony light, three goldfinch in the lavender—beauty is everywhere in these poems with Burch making sure we have everything we need, and yes, Reader, she is that good, she will never leave you wanting."
—Kelli Russell Agodon



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