Each of these poems touches down and merges so completely with a love for the "perfect geometry" of the imperfect world. Long before picking up the pen, Grenier must be leaning, resolutely, devotedly, "nosing like pigs in the golden dust" toward the conscious streaming of a poetry beyond any single poet. I want a nose like that. I want to learn to lean like that.-Farid Matuk In Our Now plunges its readers into urgent and musical currents as poet and visual artist Valyntina Grenier rewires and rewilds the language of Michael Pollan's The Botany of Desire. These poems command us to "lounge in queerness," "call the flower sex-worker" and "hear the bees leeward/ nosing like pigs through golden dust." Grenier invents a new form that distills the language of love, science, and nature to produce a necessary elixir for our contemporary moment. These poems give us hope in the improvisations of the natural world and the ways that language can bend towards its representation. "Trashed lilies lean in," Grenier tells us. "Accept the invitation/ into their throats of nectar."-Susan Briante "[O]rdinary vision/is a hinge/crowded with flowers." So begins my (our!) lucky chance to experience the world through Valyntina Grenier's capacious (and beyond ordinary) vision - a vision that is brilliant in its ability to help us know the world and ourselves through all of our senses (read these lines aloud, feel them slip and clap in your mouth), enlarging the often simplified statement that "People are nature" to include all of the grandeur and violence and banality such a statement can, and must, mean. Grenier has both witnessed and provoked the "trashed lilies" (of my body and the earth) to "punch the air" and I could not be more grateful to be in this company.-TC Tolbert
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