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Praise
for A
Wild Region:
"A ribbon of Appalachia winds through Kate Buckley’s vigorous
voice in her debut collection of poems, A Wild Region. It
was my pleasure to choose her as the winner of the 2008 James
Hearst Poetry Prize for the North American Review, and
it is an equal pleasure to welcome this book of poems, crafted
from the patterns of speech of the wild region Buckley loves
and the wildness of its people, too."
—
Molly Peacock
"Kate
Buckley's poems are dark prayers and lyrical ballads, infused
with mystery and awe... And the stories these poems tell —
finely crafted as the poems are —
are stories that speak to all of us, accessible and clear for
all their complicated depth, 'universal' precisely because they're
so deeply personal, and so deeply felt. There is so much stunning
language in this collection, so much accuracy and grace, and
there are so many images that take my breath away... Kate Buckley
shows us how the beautiful and the brutal can not only coexist
alongside one another, but exist within one another. Hers is
a necessary and welcome new voice."
—
Cecilia Woloch
"True to her Kentucky roots, Kate Buckley is a born
storyteller with a poet’s transforming vision of the world’s
details informed by loss and exile."
— Julie Kuzneski Wrinn for the Betty Gabehart Prize, Kentucky
Women Writers Conference
"In
A Wild Region, Kate Buckley explores the connections
between landscape, memory and history...Buckley's style is perfect
for this task."
—
G. Murray Thomas, Poetix.net: Poetry for Southern California
"Buckley is a firm believer in the value of the myths and
legends that have been handed down through time and that reveal
essential truths about who we are, providing a common thread
of humanity that links past, present and future generations.
She tries to give a sense of that in her poetry. So that while
the poems in her book are set in her native Kentucky and are
evocative of the hard and often desperate lives of Appalachian
people to whom black lung and hunger were all too familiar,
she emphasizes that they are indicative of a collective experience
—
stories
of love and loss that everyone can relate to."
— Jennifer
Erickson, Laguna Beach Independent
"...Moontide
Press has designed such a setting for the gems that Kate Buckley
has created. The societal memories and conscience she crafts
in her poetry, the contemporary visions that she creates in
her art, these precious jewels have found a Tiffany setting
in A Wild Region. Orange County should be proud -- this is the
best I've seen from this part of the world —
and the poetry world should take note.
— Michael
Kramer, poet & teacher
Poetix:
Poetry for Southern California, Review of A Wild Region
Radio
Interview on NPR affiliate, WUKY's Tonic: Arts & Music
Magazine with a Twist
Laguna
Beach Independent Story
Orange
County Register Article
"Kate Buckley was fabulous! Wow!
We all loved her. Plus, her voice. As I recall it, I get chills.
We all demanded that she also include a CD of her reading her
poems with any book as a set. How do I explain her voice? First,
she takes her inspirations for poems from real life events that
she discovers in the newspaper, television (History Channel),
stories she hears, even from driving down a Kentucky back road,
as a passenger with her husband Chuck at the wheel. She writes
in the car, pen to paper, capturing the scenes of life and landscape
as they scroll past her window. Loved that poem! As writers,
I will speak for all of us, she depicts the essence, the emotions
of humans with a 'shared memory' as she labels it. She told
us about a time when she was reading an article in the news
paper at the dining table while Chuck was making breakfast and
when a poem was at hand. Chuck tries to speak but she hushes
him, puts her hands over her ears to block his voice, and then
she beings to write. He calls it her 'zone'. He's a great poet's
spouse. He understands. When a poem emerges from her creative
inner being, it's not her story. She gives a voice to the people
that are the subjects, whose life drama of pain or joy must
be told. It's eerie as hell, to me, but it's like she has been
possessed by the spirit of her protagonists and it is their
emotions, words, story that Kate puts to a rhythm, an inner
beat, that haunts her. Poems about life. I'm sold on Kate. I
overheard the word genius used to describe her work. I'm no
authority, but genius does not quite do it for me. What I saw
and heard was a spiritual relationship that Kate is able to
tap into, then becomes the conduit, the scribe. Spooky in a
way. Well, you had to be there...well...here. Kate was wonderful
and she appreciated reading to writers. We get it."
—
Orange County
Writers Group's Russell Traughber's Review on "An Evening
with Kate Buckley"
Palm
Springs Sunday Art Review
The Laguna Beach Independent Article
by Suzie Harrison on the 2nd Annual Poetry Blast for Help Blue
Water: “HelpBlueWater.com will stage a poetic eruption as
Orange County’s top artists and musicians converge to translate
the planets’ unspoken language,” organizer Rick Conkey promised.
Revered in Southern California’s poetry scene, Laguna Beach
residents John Gardiner and Kate Buckley will headline the environmentally
themed event...
Tide
Pools: An Anthology of Orange Country Poetry - Reviewed
by G. Murray Thomas, Poetix.net,
Poetry for Southern California: An Anthology featuring:
Kate Buckley, Marcia Cohee, Elizabeth Fellows, John Gardiner,
Beth McIlvaine, Daniel McGinn, Michael Miller, Jaimes Palacio,
Mike Sprake, Leigh White and James Ysidro. Edited by Lee Mallory,
Ricki Mandeville, and Michael Miller. Moon Tide Press
Poetix.net
reviewer Jaimes Palacio on a recent reading:
"These beautiful women can captivate a crowd just by their mere
presence. And they are talented. Very, very talented. Though
their methods may be different the effect is the same: enticing,
dazzling and thoroughly addictive. Ms. Buckley…was like a sip
of lemonade on a hot day. Seductively perching herself on a
stool, her slightly raspy drawl spinning stories and painting
characters brimming with color. As they say, the devil was in
the details and her devils were charming, intricately carved
creations."
Poetix.net
reviewer Jaimes Palacio on Kate's reading with David St.
John at Tebot Bach:
"Kate Buckley is one of those creations you could swear
don't exist outside of a movie script written by Woody Allen-beautiful,
smart, confident and talented—but not devoid of a sly humor
and even a little charming eccentricity. (She legally changed
her name recently from Amy to Kate simply because she "had always
felt like a Kate." Much of her work revolves around Southern
life. (She's originally from Kentucky but shows only little
hints of an accent).
They are little character snapshots: The woman who waited under
the house at night,/counting ghosts and bobcats/ through lattice
of leaves, (Harlan County); the title characters in Fisherman's
Wife and American Queen, (this one purposely done with a thick
drawl); and the child that she was (your shoes were your own
country [My Mother's Closet). Buckley can go from the sun-drenched
Laurel County, (There must have been times/ when Kentucky was
a life sentence,/ a dark-veined monster burning coal in her
belly ) to the grim, rain-soaked culverts of a piece in which
a body is discovered...
One of my personal favorites also happens to be one of the best
erotic poems I have ever heard. In Sustenance Buckley maps in
vivid (yet not grossly explicit or crude) detail possibly one
of the most desirable geographies this side of Hawaii's Garden
Island and ends the poem with tasting my every sweetness,/ shaking
my body for new fruit. Enough said. Smoke ‘em if you got ‘em!
Buckley ended her set with On the Alchemy of Cells. Here she
instructs: First, you must learn to whisper - and, when/ that's
mastered: shout. yell, scream/ at the top of your scarlet lungs/
all the things that have lain so long:/ black dogs sitting solidly
on your chest."
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