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Praise for Jack Imagines a Different Map:
“What John Berryman did with his Henry persona, Kevin Brown does with Jack in this charged brew of meditations on the profound corners of the mundane: father statistics and sirens-next-door, pangs of adulthood, awkward office encounters, fading birthday Polaroids, wistful schoolyard reminiscences, smiles “full of furniture.” The poems deftly build a bulwark against the ravages of time as a way, Brown writes in a Beckettian phrase, to come to terms with “what we can and cannot carry.” Using Jack as an alter ego lens on life, Brown invokes the power of the poetic imagination to ease the existential burdens of aging and the inevitability of death. –John Parras, Editor, Map Literary "In this charming collection, the titular “Jack” seems to have parachuted into middle age. He suddenly finds himself inside a past-its-prime body and a plateaued career. Despite some nostalgia for teen romance and high-school basketball heroics, Brown steers the poems clear of self-pity. Instead, Jack treats mortality like a foreign country—something to be approached with curiosity and wonder. When faced with the dying of the light, Jack and his friends neither rage nor go gently. Instead, they make themselves membership cards in the ‘Future Corpses of America’ with pilfered office supplies while they’re supposed to be working. The poems serve as a clear-eyed reminder to readers of a certain age: that life is still sweet, even once our best days are behind us." –Tyler McMahon, author of One Potato and editor of Hawaiʻi Pacific Review |