Description

Book Synopsis
The speaker in this collection seeks an understanding of the darkness of suicide and mortal illness in the light of Christian faith. Poet Leslie Williams captures this light in tender and piercing poems that traverse a grieving world where healing is always possible but never assured: my God can do this, but my God / might not.

Trade Review

“Leslie Williams maps an uneasy distance to grace and the ‘mainsail beauty’ of life. ‘I love the purple inside oyster shells,’ one speaker admits, ‘but haven’t done a thing to help them.’ This collection offers us toothsome poems, witty and supple in their imagery, as we approach revelation inch by inch.”—Sandra Beasley, author of Count the Waves and I Was the Jukebox

“Leslie Williams’s Even the Dark is about finding the human person in a sometimes dark and unforgiving world. The speaker in these lovely and finely wrought poems finds her sometimes spiritual and sometimes physical voice in some familiar situations: dealing with children, neighbors, strangers on planes, writers’ suicides, children getting sick, going to the supermarket, arranging flowers. Through a range of interesting forms, and intricate syntaxes, the poems show Williams as a master of using the thinking mechanism of poetry as a possible way to peace.”—Sean Singer, author of Honey & Smoke

“The finely worked and astonishingly beautiful poems in Even the Dark are prayers and meditations that ask the most difficult questions about suffering—our own, and others’—without losing sight of the infinite richness to be found in small, daily moments. Williams’s deep thinking about the lives of women—their tending of others, their demons and despairs, their need to remember and reclaim autonomous selves—allows her to render both individual and collective realities. Immense sadness is counterbalanced by intensity of insight; raw loss is transformed by the poet’s spiritually attuned wisdom, worthy of absolute trust.” —Jennifer Barber, author of Works on Paper

Even the Dark

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Sat 27 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Leslie Williams

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      View other formats and editions of Even the Dark by Leslie Williams

      Publisher: MP-SIL Southern Illinois Uni
      Publication Date: 9/30/2019 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780809337491, 978-0809337491
      ISBN10: 0809337495

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The speaker in this collection seeks an understanding of the darkness of suicide and mortal illness in the light of Christian faith. Poet Leslie Williams captures this light in tender and piercing poems that traverse a grieving world where healing is always possible but never assured: my God can do this, but my God / might not.

      Trade Review

      “Leslie Williams maps an uneasy distance to grace and the ‘mainsail beauty’ of life. ‘I love the purple inside oyster shells,’ one speaker admits, ‘but haven’t done a thing to help them.’ This collection offers us toothsome poems, witty and supple in their imagery, as we approach revelation inch by inch.”—Sandra Beasley, author of Count the Waves and I Was the Jukebox

      “Leslie Williams’s Even the Dark is about finding the human person in a sometimes dark and unforgiving world. The speaker in these lovely and finely wrought poems finds her sometimes spiritual and sometimes physical voice in some familiar situations: dealing with children, neighbors, strangers on planes, writers’ suicides, children getting sick, going to the supermarket, arranging flowers. Through a range of interesting forms, and intricate syntaxes, the poems show Williams as a master of using the thinking mechanism of poetry as a possible way to peace.”—Sean Singer, author of Honey & Smoke

      “The finely worked and astonishingly beautiful poems in Even the Dark are prayers and meditations that ask the most difficult questions about suffering—our own, and others’—without losing sight of the infinite richness to be found in small, daily moments. Williams’s deep thinking about the lives of women—their tending of others, their demons and despairs, their need to remember and reclaim autonomous selves—allows her to render both individual and collective realities. Immense sadness is counterbalanced by intensity of insight; raw loss is transformed by the poet’s spiritually attuned wisdom, worthy of absolute trust.” —Jennifer Barber, author of Works on Paper

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