"Startling in both breath and intimacy..."

Postcards from a Summer Girl is full of tight, exact poems punctuated by precise images. I place an empty glass/ upon drywall, but I can't/ listen to vacancy. Christine Laine's voice--startling in both breath and intimacy--is a voice worth listening to.  -Suzanne Frischkorn

 

"She keeps a variety of prosodic arrows in her quiver..."

C. E. Laine's ALLEGORY and THE WEIGHT OF DUST are reviewed in great detail by David Cooper in May's edition of Poetic Voices. This is a unique look at both early books as a body of work.

 

"Essential... stark, evocotive verse..."

Editor-in-chief kris t kahn of Sometimes City reviews The Weight of Dust by C. E. Laine. Kahn says Laine "proves a minimalist approach...is essential...stark, evocative verse...her haiku sequences are astounding...the forefront of contemporary haiku."

 
 C.E. Laine
 
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Newsflash
chapbook
TWO STROPHES FOR A STAIN
BLEEDS HER LOVER

by Michael Paul Ladanyi
and Christine E. Laine

 

The poets return for a second helping of synesthetic words, following their debut collaboration, Suburban Fairy Tales of Brilliant Ash and Blue Sins. Illustrated with photography by Ladanyi & Laine.

 
 
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