Mary McGinnis loves this world where we are, where “the first March ants candrift up your arm”; where “sassy women hold democracy up”; and “wells have never spoken before”. In one small chapbook, her poems move from lyrical: “I
want to recall all the nuances of our quiet”; to wildly imaginative, funny, and irreverent: “Stand still, so that I can know you god:/ Poke out from my underarm so I at least know where you come from.” And in another poem: “Here by the
deepest lake in New Mexico,/ here with my love scars,/ Here to wait for Jesus who has a favorite spot on the pier.” While loving laughter, she also courageously faces love, loss, and letting go: “If I knife my way through to you/ at the bottom of
the lake, you’ll reach out a skeletal hand/ …handing me yellow fire in a green glass.” “It needs to snow in the mind, so I will forget you.”
--Jane Lipman
Author of On the Back Porch of the Moon