Kim Bridgford is the director of Poetry by the Sea and the editor of Mezzo Cammin. The author of thirteen books, she is the recipient of grants from the NEA, the Connecticut Commission on the Arts, and the Ucross Foundation. With Russell Goings, she rang the closing bell of the New York Stock Exchange, in celebration of his book The Children of Children Keep Coming, for which she wrote the introduction.
"In a book full of surprises, Kim Bridgford reveals herself to be a
wonderful religious poet. The title crown is a tour de force marked
by some deeply memorable lines, and the series of poems on biblical
themes called 'What Fresh Hell is This' is especially moving, as
form and meaning coalesce into something far more than the sum of
their parts. 'That's how it is. You are what you most fear. / You
think you know your shining, private name: / You don't. It is the
language of your secrets.' In remarkable lines such as these,
Bridgford speaks with candor and depth of mysteries that need to be
revealed."
--Annie Finch, author of Spells and Among the Godesses
"'You never know the truth, but try to guess.' And guess Kim
Bridgford does in these moving poems chronicling the life and death
of Sylvia Plath. A Crown for Ted and Sylvia simultaneously explores
and expands the mythos of the Hughes-Plath saga, conjuring the dead
and giving them voices, allowing them to speak for themselves and
tell their heartbreaking tale. Formally elegant, classically
severe, Bridgford's poems move by suggestion and indirection,
implying much more than can be said, not just about these lost
souls but about our own lives. There is a sibylline quality to this
book. The repeating forms the poet favors--haunting villanelles,
playful pentinas, and, of course, the regal crown--function like
charms, strange enchantments hinting at mysteries that cannot be
unraveled. It's a fact: 'You never know the truth, but try to
guess.' These splendid poems bring us closer to that knowing."
--Angela Alaimo O'Donnell, author of Lovers' Almanac and Still
Pilgrim
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