Readiness: Prose Poems by Mark Cox

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Readiness by Mark Cox.jpg
mark cox readiness pub photo 300 dpi cropped.jpg

Readiness: Prose Poems by Mark Cox

$14.95

Woodrow Hall Top Shelf Book Award

ISBN 978-1-941209-78-3

9 x 6 softcover, 80 pages

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Praise for Readiness

Behind surfaces that can sometimes be wryly comic, Mark Cox is unafraid to risk adult tenderness (“brutal tenderness” he says in one poem) and great empathy for this world’s sufferers. Which is to say that beneath a rich variety of occasions (from an ancient Egyptian mummifier doing up a fifteen-foot crocodile, to a current-day housewife doing up an angel food cake), Cox’s bedrock concern is that impossible thing of endless grief and joy that we call the human condition. These poetic meditations and monologues are some of the least prosaic prose you’ll ever read. —Albert Goldbarth

“Thrilling prose poems from a cherished writer….Cox gives lie to the common notion that prose poetry is too formless to count as real verse….[He] is as careful with diction, rhythm, and even rhyme as one might be if they were writing strict alexandrines—and yet, his poems are as fluid and readable as Jack Kerouac’s novels.” Kirkus Reviews

Praise for Mark Cox

Tony Hoagland has said Mark Cox is “a veteran of the deep water; there’s no one like him,” and Thomas Lux identified him as “one of the finest poets of his generation.”  No one speaks more effectively of the vital and enduring syntaxes of common, even communal, life. —Richard Simpson

Mark Cox has a wry, deadpan humor, a piercing wit, and a keen knowledge of the contradictions of the human heart. Thirty-Seven Years from the Stone confirms Mark Cox’s promise and further fulfills his talent.—Edward Hirsch

[Mark Cox] meditates, describes, narrates the impossible path between what is in us and what is around us—that is the heroism of his work. —Stephen Berg

One of the best books I’ve read in years. In a style that’s brash, offbeat, tough-minded and big-hearted, these poems explore the fundamental mysteries of love between parent and child, self and other, self and world. Beyond the inventive language and formal range, what makes [Natural Causes] so memorable is Cox’s refusal to look away from even the hardest facts of “unadulterated sorrow.” —Alan Shapiro