No posts with label A review of Belinda Subraman’s “Left Hand Dharma” (Unlikely Books 2018) by Heidi Blakeslee This book of poetry is different from any other I’ve ever read. For one thing, it spans nearly four decades with poems from the early ‘80s through today. There are collections of poems from long ago that read like they were written yesterday. The blazing arrow that binds them all together is Belinda’s no-bullshit in your face truth. You can tell that she found her poetry voice early and stuck with it. By far the two most fascinating subjects in here for me were her poems about working as a hospice nurse and a nurse on a psych ward. “Late night at the psyche ward” from her collection Lummox Press Red Book Series. Show all posts
No posts with label A review of Belinda Subraman’s “Left Hand Dharma” (Unlikely Books 2018) by Heidi Blakeslee This book of poetry is different from any other I’ve ever read. For one thing, it spans nearly four decades with poems from the early ‘80s through today. There are collections of poems from long ago that read like they were written yesterday. The blazing arrow that binds them all together is Belinda’s no-bullshit in your face truth. You can tell that she found her poetry voice early and stuck with it. By far the two most fascinating subjects in here for me were her poems about working as a hospice nurse and a nurse on a psych ward. “Late night at the psyche ward” from her collection Lummox Press Red Book Series. Show all posts