There's a playful terror in Maria Flook's poems. Her animated word is full of signs and signals; she always finds the telling analogue or makes the figure which reveals, illuminated everyday perceptions. "Dreams have cruel motives. Sleep worries/ both the decent and the wicked/ who keep odd hours/ so I walked out."
The poems search for reprieve, or a calm, in wronged lives. Any accusations are fully explored, recalled in forgiveness or apology for relationships long over.
MARIA FLOOK teaches at Warren Wilson College. She has published two other books, Reckless Wedding(1982), her first book of poems for which she received a Great Lakes Colleges Association New Writer Award, and Dancing with My Sister Jane(1987) a book of short stories. She has been a writing fellow at The Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, and received an NEA fellowship in poetry writing.