When Anita S. Pulier explains to her late father in
Why I Read Poetry
that occasionally I stumble
on a poem that delivers an oxygen blast,
a poem that stops me short in a realm of stark
recognition,
she is describing what we find in
her own exquisite works that startle and move us with
the insights and wisdom they extract
from the mundane encounters of daily life.
Robert A. Rosenstone, author of King of Odessa: A Novel of Isaac Babel ; Do People Look Up at the Moon Anymore? ; Red Star, Crescent Moon: A Muslim-Jewish Love Story ; Adventures of a Postmodern Historian: Living and Writing the Past ; Sharq Art: East/West — West/East and a dozen other works of history, culture, biography and criticism.
Hang banners and blow up balloons,
a line from one of Anita S. Pulier's poems,
struck me as a celebratory description of her first
full-length book of poems, The Butcher's
Diamond.
For that is what Pulier does, she celebrates the quotidian
realities of her life in the city she loves and lives in,
New York.
Chance encounters, time spent with grandkids, the mundane
embellished with love and a little quirkiness, like owning
a toaster with three settings: bagel, waffle and
poetry,
or relishing an eye-opening dinner with Auden and Spender.
In poem after poem, there is a deep sense of gratitude,
for a long and loving marriage, for old friends,
for the survival of prosthetic hips.
In every line, straight-on ovations to the life worth
living.
Florence Weinberger, author of These Days of Simple Mooring, Sacred Graffiti, The Invisible Telling Its Shape, Breathing Like a Jew, Carnal Fragrance and Ghost Tattoo.
Humor, adventure and insight abound in Anita Pulier's
first full-length volume of poems.
In The Butcher's Diamond,
also the
book's title, a diamond ring holds the key to her
Aunt Freda's disappointing love life and her own
mother's socialist ambivalence
about jewelry when she inherits the ring.
In a section titled Metropolitan Life
about New York City
where the poet lives for some of the year,
Face to Face
describes an encounter with
a stranger—a hip elderly African-American woman with
a ...pink dyed patch of hair.
As they ride the M104 bus the stranger points to her
prosthetic leg that
replaced the limb she lost in a subway accident.
She tells the author she's on her way to ...
Columbia Medical School
for a meeting/of prosthetic limb users./They use her
as an inspiration.
Whether the poems in The Butcher's
Diamond reflect
family, a loving, long term marriage, aging and the world,
Anita Pulier has a great talent for making ordinary life
feel remarkable.
Jean Colonomos, author of Art Farm and several produced plays including the verse play Carrie and the prize-winning Black Dawn.