Winner of the Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award (2015) Winner of the Audre Lorde Prize (2014)
"Angie Estes has recently created some of the most beautiful verbal objects on the planet." (Stephen Burt, Boston Review)
“James Merrill, Amy Clampitt and Gjertrud Schnackenberg all won praise, and sparked controversy, for their elaboration; Estes shares some of their challenges, should please their readers, and belongs in their stellar company.†– Publishers Weekly
Angie Estes' previous book, Tryst (also from Oberlin College Press), was named one of two finalists for the 2010 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry, as "a collection of poems remarkable for its variety of subjects, array of genres and nimble use of language." Her much-anticipated new book is another glittering demonstration of her gifts.