by Kathleen Winter (Author)
Cat's Tongue is the latest publication from California-based writer Kathleen Winter, author of three award-winning poetry collections. Armed with wit, charm, and original imagery, she engages with incidents in her Texas youth that range from traumatic to ecstatic--strewing oilfields, deer, drug dealers, and football games in between. These poems vary widely in style and subject matter, but they share precisely crafted language and this writer's unique perspective on a central Texas childhood.
The TRP Chapbook Series ... from "Each Day a New Round of Sadness" Islands of the Hawaiian archipelago are connectedto each other under the surface of the sea. Under the surface of the sea something roils
like a volcano preparing to explode. To explode sometimes suggests a solution
to the situation of constraint, ubiquitous as fear these days, when stasis is a prize.
A prize, that is, compared to illness. Can't wellness sink its teeth deep into me
to feel acutely as a wound? A wound is what the dream delivers
with an image of my mother wreathed in Hawaiian flowers--
tuberose releasing its cloying daylong ennui.
Author Biography
KATHLEEN WINTER's poetry collections include: Transformer (The Word Works 2020); I will not kick my friends (Elixir 2018); and Nostalgia for the Criminal Past (Elixir 2012). She was granted the Texas Institute of Letters' Ralph Johnston Fellowship and Bob Bush Memorial Award, the Elixir Prize, the Antivenom Prize, and Poetry Society of America's The Writer Magazine/Emily Dickinson Award. Her poems and short fiction appear in The New Republic, New Statesman, Agni, Cincinnati Review, Colorado Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, Gulf Coast, Five Points and Poetry London. She was awarded fellowships at Sewanee Writers' Conference, Dora Maar House and James Merrill House.