
Susan Elizabeth Howe
SUSAN ELIZABETH HOWE {[email protected]} Susan Elizabeth Howe’s second poetry collection, Salt, was published in 2013; her third is in the works. Her poems have recently appeared in Poetry, Pleiades, Atlanta Review, Western Humanities Review, and other journals. A reviewer and contributing editor of Tar River Poetry, she lives with her husband Cless Young in Ephraim, Utah, and loves southern Utah’s spectacular canyons and deserts.
Articles
Review: Traveling “the undiscovered country” Stephen Carter, ed. Moth and Rust: Mormon Encounters with Death
Read moreThe Goodness of Created Things
Read moreMy Sadness
Read moreThe Skin of the Story
Read moreThe Unreliable Narrator: Or, A Detour Through Pecadillo | Patricia Hart Molen, Little Sins
“What was a nice girl like Florence doing in a Cuban bordello—stone cold dead?” As the question from the cover indicates, this paperback is packaged to sell as a murder mystery, the kind one picks…
Read moreOvum
The egg insists on its own reality,
So I go along, easy, not one
To counter what I don’t know.
Celebrations | Emma Lou Thayne, Things Happen: Poems of Survival
The publication of a new book of poetry is an occasion for celebration, particularly when the poetry is by such a generous and great-hearted soul as Emma Lou Thayne. But the title of this volume,…
Read moreI Am Watching Four Canada Geese
in a perfect diamond of flight
slip between me and the sky, circle
toward rest and cover for the night.
The lake is a polished absurdity
“I Do Remember How It Smelled Heavenly”: Mormon Aspects of May Swenson’s Poetry
Any discussion of Mormon culture or doctrine in the work of nationally prominent American poet May Swenson must begin with the caveat that Swenson, for virtually all of her adult life, was not a believing…
Read moreThe Danish Genesis of Virginia Sorensen’s Lotte’s Locket
[1]Describing her research for The Proper Gods, a novel about the Yaqui Indians and their culture, Virginia Sorensen said her work had been “an excursion into cultural anthropology” that she thought would continue the rest…
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