
I’m thrilled to announce that my first collection I lost summer somewhere has just been published and is available at Amazon and through Kelsay Books.
Here are some of the great things my fellow poets have said about it.
“Melancholy, exuberance, nostalgia, fulfillment, contentment, longing – Sarah Russell hits all the spots, and there isn’t one poem where a woman won’t be able to identify in some way. She’s singing all our songs, putting into magical words things we felt so often but never knew how to tell. Deep sadness matched by laughter, gentleness, love and a sense of adventure. It was a privilege being there with her, living what she remembers, identifying with every line.”
Rose Mary Boehm, author of Tangents, From the Ruhr to Somewhere Near Dresden,and Peru Blues
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“Sarah Russell brings us into her world, a world of “dream-filled summer nights,” where “leaves are October butterflies.” Russell’s poems sing the important moments of life. It’s a song that stays in your mind, drawing you back to the poems again and again.”
Nina Bennett, author of Mix Tape and The House of Yearning
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“Sarah Russell’s poems don’t have to crawl under your skin – they’ve always been there. If you haven’t known a suicide, or gone through divorce or cancer, you’ve known the fear. If you’ve never had a love you’d marry twice if you had three lives, you’ve felt the longing. Russell may have lost summer somewhere, but she has found what makes us human.”
Alarie Tennille, author of Waking on the Moon and Running Counterclockwise
Very poignant.
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Thank you.
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touching and so sad
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Thanks, Beth.
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A great example of less-is-more. Beautifully balanced and precise.
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Thanks very much, Dave. High praise!
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So much is unsaid yet reveals a lot. Thanks for joining in Sarah.
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Thanks, Grace. Late getting to everyone’s poetry this week. We had a minor fire… Everything’s OK, but it did set me back. This weekend…
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Sometimes what we thought was a perfect fit doesn’t fit any more! Very short lived indeed! Well done!
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Thank you, Dwight. You’re right about “perfect fits.”
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circles in the sand says so much here
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Thanks very much. Less is more…
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Was this an erasure poem? Magnificent response if it was for the prompt, or not: So much said for what wedding rings encircle, what they cannot.
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Brendan, I didn’t know there was a prompt, and no, it isn’t erasure. Just for Open Link night. And thank you!
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Nice description of a separation as dividing who gets what, rather than sharing, at a meal.
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Oooo, thanks, Frank. I hadn’t seen that. I love it when people see things that I didn’t when I wrote the poem!
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“Circles short-lived in the tide,” speaks volumes! Such an evocative write.
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Thank you, Sanaa.
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I like the play on circles and ring, Sarah, the civility of the bucket of clams and corn and the possible regret in the dresser drawer.
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Thanks, Kim.
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Breviloquent! You tell a huge story in a small package, with room for details like “a bucket of clams and corn”. Wow. This is great.
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Thank you, Mish. Most of my poems are short. Some editors say too short. Others like them. Go figure…
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I love the movement in this where the last line is like a sad revelation that also rips the previous stanzas wide open… a memory? a new lover?… so much is not said.
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Thanks a lot, Bjorn. I try to follow Joan Didion’s idea that the last lines of a story or poem should open a door to a whole new story. I don’t always succeed, but it’s worth trying every time.
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Those last two lines a story in itself. (K)
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Thanks so much, Kerfe.
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