Little mercy Poems

Robin Walter

Book - 2025

"In award-winning poet Robin Walter's debut collection, Little Mercy, writing and looking--seeing feelingly--become a practice in radical care. These poems pursue moments of shared recognition, when looking up to see a deer across a stream, or when sunlight passes through wingtip onto palm, the self found in other, the river in vein of wrist. Attuned to the transparent beauty in the natural world, Walter's poems are often glancing observations unspooling down the page, their delicacies belying their powers of profound knowing. The formal logic of this work is the intricate architecture of a nest. Each line becomes a blade of grass, each dash a little twig, each parenthesis a small feather-all woven together deliberately, seem...ingly fragile but held fast with surprising strength. In their lyric variations, repetitions, and fragments, employed toward a deep attention to wren, river, and reflection, the human almost falls away entirely, a steady and steadying state of being that is unconscious, expansive. Written out of a broken landscape in a broken time, Little Mercy is a book of gratitude, one that draws our inner selves to the present and living world, to the ways we can break and mend"--

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
Minneapolis, Minnesota : Graywolf Press 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Robin Walter (author)
Physical Description
pages cm
Awards
Winner of the 2024 Academy of American Poets First Book Award
ISBN
9781644453308
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Walter's debut, winner of the Academy of American Poets' First Book Award, is a practice in observation, awareness, and respect for the natural world. The poems are lyrical and stunning in their imagery and tone, and readers will recognize how they mimic a person regarding their surroundings. Words are arranged carefully, carving into the white space of the page, offering the greatness of small details. "A wren // no larger / than a fist // flew to me-- / lent my hand // her / gravity". Most of the poems are slim and concise, but there is a progressive movement to the pieces, which call back to each other while finding new ways to see something familiar. The wren, the nest, the hand, the body--each returns with increasing effect. Walter writes, "We were practicing love, then grief, / then both," which aptly describes how it feels to be alive. It's hard to suggest what different readers might find most powerful or true about this collection, but it will serve many, as wise books often do, as a guide they weren't aware they needed.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.