“Today you fell asleep in the car / holding the roses” is one of a handful of unadorned observations in Tanya Bellehumeur-Allat’s new book of poems, striking as much for its beauty as its simplicity. Another one: “All day it’s been Easter.” Days are where we live, Larkin said, and this seems especially true in Bellehumeur-Allat’s poems, where every snowy morning presents an opportunity to resurrect life anew.
The Hospitality of Trees Shoreline Press
Tanya Bellehumeur-Allat
$19.95
paperback
88pp
9781926953915
These are sentimental poems, yes, but the best ones recognize these truths owe something to the mystery beyond, or exist somewhere between the surface and the subterranean: “They say / there are pike nine feet long, as big as sharks / living there, in the eternal dark.”mRb






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