Howie Good’s “Dangerous Acts Starring Unstable Elements,” WINNER OF PRIZE AMERICANA

Howie Good

 

MockingHeart Review contributor, Howie Good’s Dangerous Acts Starring Unstable Elements contains poems that feature a penetrating analysis of contemporary life. It is published in paperback, available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble, and distributed through Ingram.

 

Praise for Dangerous Acts Starring Unstable Elements

DALE WISELY: One of the poems in this collection is “On Being Asked, ‘Where Do You Get Your Ideas?’” The question annoys artists, but when I read Howie Good’s work, it’s the question I want to ask him. In Good’s recent work, he builds each poem into a hypnotic sequence of seemingly unrelated images and observations, meditations on the strangeness of existence, the anxiety and dread of our time, but with glints of beauty and grace.

 

LAURA M. KAMINSKI: Dangerous Acts of Unstable Elements is a sequence of “selfies” on exhibit, one per page, in which the poet is relentlessly “photo-bombed” by reality, history, and myth. Nasty stains of every imaginable kind, the memorabilia of a witless age, constitute another section of the museum… (“And That’s What It’s All About”). But the poet gives us clues on how to cope with the nastiness: Point with your fading heart at the shadows puddled in the bottom of the ditch, where, nonetheless, something still glitters… (“Objects in This Mirror”). The only piece in these …Acts… to which I had an objection is the prose poem that ends with I made a list of things still to do: choke, weave, sense, deal, blunder. Which left just enough time to admire, between small, tedious breaths, the snowy egret standing there. The poem is titled “Words Fail Me.” No, Howie Good. I disagree. They don’t.

 

BRAD ROSE: In Dangerous Acts Starring Unstable Elements the masterful Howie Good teaches us to look coolly and directly into the eye of quotidian surreality. Although the speakers in Good’s stark, yet luminous, poems variously inform us that: the future consists of a certain unrest in all that has been, that behind every work of art lies an uncommitted crime, and that the rider may guide the horse, but only in the direction the horse wants to go, we learn from Good’s inimitable powers of ironic description, keen eye for dark paradox, and unfailingly calm counsel to ably navigate an often up-ended, disconcerting territory.  Indeed, with Good’s skillful guidance we learn not only to negotiate this weird and mysterious world, but to relish it.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

 

Howie Good, a journalism professor at SUNY New Paltz, is the author of several poetry collections, including Beautiful Decay and The Cruel Radiance of What Is from Another

New Calligraphy, Fugitive Pieces from Right Hand Pointing Press, and Lovesick from The Poetry Press of Press Americana. He co-edits White Knuckle Press with Dale Wisely.

 

Contact information:
The Poetry Press of Press Americana

Americana: The Institute for the Study of American Popular Culture

7095-1240 Hollywood Boulevard

Hollywood, CA  90028

editor@americanpopularculture.com

http://www.americanpopularculture.com

 

Howie Good

Goodh51@gmail.com

 

 

 

Two weeks until submissions re-open

We are so grateful to our contributors and readers who have helped us skyrocket in our first issue that was released on January 1st. We’ve had readers from over 30 countries visit the site, connecting to the authors within. We hope you have enjoyed the selections we have made. We are getting ready to do it again.

We are looking forward to March 1st, when submissions re-open.  Please read our guidelines https://mockingheartreview.com/submission-guidelines/ and prepare your submissions accordingly.  If you want to surmise a bit about our taste in poetry, read our first issue. Our taste is quite refined, and yet, broad– The quality of the work is our most defined requirement.

 

 

An interview with MHR contributor, Susan Tepper

MockingHeart Review contributor and friend, Susan Tepper, is interviewed by T. L. Sherwood at Literary Orphans.

Here’s the link: http://literaryorphans.org/ttl/t-l-sherwood-interviews-susan-tepper/

 

Susan’s book “Dear Petrov” will be released Feb. 2nd by Pure Slush Press. Congrats, Susan!

dear Petrov cover (1)

 

 

 

Issue 1 of MockingHeart Review

Enjoy the Inaugural Issue of MockingHeart Review, while I sleep tonight, or whenever because it is full of tremendous beauty.

 

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