Poems By M.L. Liebler
Paper - 9780814333822
Price: $15.95t
Subjects: Fiction and Poetry
Series: Made in Michigan Writers Series
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Awards
Published by Wayne State University Press
M. L. Liebler is on the faculty of the department of English at Wayne State University and is the author of several books of poetry, including The Moon a Box, Written in Rain: New and Selected Poems, 1985–2000, and Stripping the Adult Century Bare: New and Selected Writings. He is the director of Springfed Arts: Metro Detroit Writers Literary Arts Organization.
Other Books by M. L. Liebler: Abandon Automobile: Detroit City Poetry 2001,
"When M. L. Liebler scrawls, types, speaks, or sings the blues, our whole unseen world shakes. Poetry, the original human language, races back like 'blood in the moon tonight.'... The ineffable power of human utterance—full of feeling, full of skill—can't be stopped. Liebler's arrow aims at more than the heart and mind. Like Lazarus, he drifts to tell us how much we need one another, how lonely we labor in our TV, CD, DVD, LED, iPod, satellite caves, 'filling the blue ancient Chinese night,' the Michigan night, and 'all the wars we fight in our sleep.'"
— Al Young, poet laureate of California
"M. L. Liebler brings poems of great zest, joy, and large heart to appreciative audiences worldwide. He deserves our praise."
— Colette Inez, author of Spinoza Doesn't Come Here Any More
"Once again, in Wide Awake in Someone Else's Dream , M. L. Liebler has demonstrated what a marvelous and sensitive poet he is. This collection is so multifaceted that it is difficult to describe. On the surface, most of the poems are about places, each significant in its own way. On a deeper level, they are a personal and wonderfully lyrical search for self, wholeness, and meaning, a tension between dream and reality. I love this collection. I am drawn back to each poem over and over, each reading revealing something new."
— Naomi Long Madgett, poet laureate of Detroit and author of Pilgrim Journey
"M. L. Liebler has more poetry, more passion (and compassion), more spirit, more fire in his little left finger than most other poets can muster or steal in a lifetime. His poems are intensely alive, readable (a lot of poetry is not!), and true."
— Thomas Lux, author of The Cradle Place and The Street of Clocks