portrait Photo, ©John Clines, 2007


Select New Poems, Interviews, Reviews, Videos

2012

Two New Poems in Fox Chase Review


Interview by Gregory Lawless on Liquid Like This

 

2011

New Poem in Blinking Cursor

 

New Videos of New Yinzer Reading, October 2011


Poem from Rare Space on Amphibi

 

2010

Review Of Liquid Like This by Michele Battiste in Rattle

 

2009

Pics from Yawp, Carnival Poetica with Don Bertschman & Danny Morrow

 

2008

Performance videos from Liquid Like This book launch at The Thunderbird Cafe, July 2008

Pgh. City Paper review of Liquid Like This


Prosody Interview with Jan Beatty


Buy Liquid Like This

 

Email Leslie to Buy Rare Space

The poems of Leslie Anne Mcilroy have always displayed her agile two-sided touch. In Liquid Like This, she intensifies this talent for seeking and seeing both sides of truth, bridging the beautiful and the profane. Like Tom Waits' baby sister and Neruda's grand-daughter, her new gritty narratives seduce as easily as they caution; soothe as easily as they trouble. They "make a mark on [our] silence, / tell [us] something holy and born" about the poetry of desire.

Terrance Hayes

In a city/literary neighborhood/sexual terrain recognizable as home, Mcilroy gives us an organic voice, outside academia, claiming female autonomies unimaginable to most women a couple generations ago. She does so within scrupulously and movingly crafted poems of dark beauty, lit from within by love’s painful, inescapable knowledge, “past and passing and to come.” The struggle for money — a palpable backdrop — authenticates the poems’ urban bluesiness. Smart, often wise, even dressed-to-kill wise, the mix of things that make up this book are anything but formulaic, making the life and death stakes of the everyday — the impossibility of this sort of book, this sort of woman’s life — familiar to us all.

Linda McCarriston

Leslie Anne Mcilroy says: No matter what you say, I hear the truth. And she does. Then she speaks it back to us — double. She leads us to the shine of it, the deep, dark unspeakable of it. Liquid Like This opens the mouth of story and drops us into the wetness — there is no periphery, there is no extraneous — and here we are, surrounded by the celebrated, flawed body where the clitoris plays the main role and we're in the world of foreskin/not foreshadow, with no before/no after: only voice, a woman in the midst of a life lived real.

Jan Beatty

Leslie Anne Mcilroy’s poetry is honest and direct, like a conversation with a good friend who tells the truth. Her most visceral work is also her most courageous. These poems are brimming with passion and energy, indeed the stuff of life itself.

Martín Espada

Contact Leslie at: lamcilroy@verizon.net
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