Description

Long’s work begs to be read aloud in order to savor the rich language and rhythm she instills in each poem. She explores the beauty of specific bridges while employing them as a metaphor for crossings to death (a sister’s suicide), eros, and art. Part elegy, the book also explores living, remembering, and celebrating.

Genres

About the author(s)

Priscilla Long is a writer of poetry, creative nonfiction, science, fiction, and history. She is the author of several books, including Fire and Stone: Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going? and Crossing Over: Poems (UNM Press). She lives in Seattle, Washington.

Reviews

No two people deal with loss in exactly the same way, which is one reason why Priscilla Long's Crossing Over: Poems is so remarkable. . . . In writing out her grief over her sister's suicide, her emotions universally resonate with the reader. Through interlocking themes and images, she articulates what it means to come to terms with the past in order to move forward into the future.--The Hooch

Long presents a collection of poems that explores deeper aspects of Pacific Northwest, interlacing elegies, including for her deceased sister, with our dreamy landscapes. She uses bridges as metaphors to evoke the world around us.--The Seattle Times

Long presents a collection of poems that explores deeper aspects of Pacific Northwest, interlacing elegies, including for her deceased sister, with our dreamy landscapes. She uses bridges as metaphors to evoke the world around us.--The Seattle Times

Memory is a bridge, poet Priscilla Long reminds us in this shimmering, elegantly structured collection: these poems lead back to the bright sources of longing and grief, guided by Long's excellent and playful ear, passion for language, and spine-tingling insights. Crossing Over interlaces elegies--including a gorgeous series for a lost sister--with remembered love, human tragedy, dreamy sensation, moody northwestern landscapes, and bridges--real and metaphorical. The joy of creation leavens every poem. I have long anticipated this book: it was so worth the wait.--Kathleen Flenniken, author of Plume: Poems