Brick Road Poetry Press

poetry made to edify

The mission of Brick Road Poetry Press is to publish and promote poetry that entertains, amuses, edifies, and surprises a wide audience of appreciative readers.  We are not qualified to judge who deserves to be published, so we concentrate on publishing what we enjoy. Our preference is for poetry geared toward dramatizing the human experience in language rich with sensory image and metaphor, recognizing that poetry can be, at one and the same time, both familiar as the perspiration of daily labor and as outrageous as a carnival sideshow.

Rising to the Rim by Carol Tyx

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Rising to the Rim by Carol Tyx

$15.95

Finalist, Brick Road Poetry Prize

Rising to the Rim is Out of Stock at Brick Road Poetry Press.

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Paperback: 128 pages
Publisher: Brick Road Poetry Press (July 8, 2013)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0983530491
ISBN-13: 978-0983530497
Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.3 inches
Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces

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ABOUT RISING TO THE RIM

In Carol Tyx’s Rising to the Rim, we are in the presence of a thoughtful and loving sensibility that speaks in a language both energetic and simply put, language that opens a door and invites us in to marvel at what these poems notice—from a red tomato hidden behind its leaves to a revelation in old hiking boots, from the loneliness of an empty house to the red surprise of a raspberry patch ready to give today “what you missed yesterday.”  Time and again these poems suggest a mature poet, who has raised children and seen her parents through the end of their lives, a poet who rages deliberately at injustice and muses quietly at falling leaves or the love of a father for his young son. In this moving collection, Carol Tyx observes with great skill and invites us to watch as well, as if such attention and such singing are the practice needed “to learn/how to love everything.”

—James McKean

There is a wise observer in these poems, someone very awake to significant, visionary elements and possibilities in experience—“trying not to close / trying to taste this late afternoon” or “tell me how one moment / stands out, luminous and wet.”  Carol Tyx always convinces me in her painterly attention to things that happen, that are, in the world, and her manner and voice are characteristically refreshing, as in “The easiest way to make sure / you love someone well is to / love everything, but we know / how hard that is, don’t we?”  The tenderness is unforced. This is a clear and fearless poet who can talk quite naturally to her loneliness, to her bladder, to her bed.  Alert to dramas in lives other than her own, she is also unsparing in recording darker moments, diminishments, inevitable declines.  Her sometimes stark sadness, her gift for the celebratory, make this a distinctive collection of poems.

—Michael Dennis Browne

Carol Tyx unearths these quiet poems from her middle years for anyone who finds, in the ordinary, the extraordinary.

—Cecile Goding