"'The country poor used to mark graves / with their best piece of china--chipped bowl / butter dish, ' their tribute a form of ensoulment. And the poet who beholds this gesture in all its native eloquence has made of it an ars poetica. I know no writer whose vision is more generous, more inclusive than that of Eric Leigh. The thirteen-year-old girl who feeds a houseful of siblings on dandelion greens, the machinist working the midnight shift, the drag queen, the barman, the heroin addict on the bus: poetry cannot keep them from harm, but it can, in the deft hands of Leigh, endow them with mortal radiance." --Linda Gregerson, author of Magnetic North and The Woman Who Died in Her Sleep "Eric Leigh writes of loss in poems that are deeply moving and yet unsentimental. Reading his first collection, Harm's Way, I'm struck by his intensity and eloquence. He has the charm of a storyteller with a wide range of settings. . . . A sequence, 'The Dark-Light of Spring, ' courageously recounts a violent family death. The title poem has me enthralled." --Grace Schulman, author of The Broken String
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