Women learning to sing again after a war. Immigrants learning a new world and language while trying not to forget the old. The Seven Deadly Sins as fashion statements. A train ride into the afterlife. A woman putting on red lipstick in a colorless city. Mary Magdalene eyed through a modern lens. A daughter calling her dead father in a dream. In The Blue Divide, Linda Nemec Foster navigates the edges and depths of worlds both here and beyond-through currents of art, love, war, dreams, religion, history, language, family-to map what flows between us. Testimonial to human endurance and love song to the human spirit, this gem of a book, retrieved from the deep by a poet at the height of her prowess, is as wide as a 'cavalcade of blue sky' and as deep as 'the blue damask of morning.' Hold these poems up to the light to see the wide blue world (and the world in you) changed, for good. * Robert Fanning, author of The Seed Thieves, American Prophet, Our Sudden Museum, and Severance *
Linda Nemec Foster's poems flex their powerful muscles in this dynamic new collection. With clarity and intensity, she dives deep into the shadows, and deep into the light-global landscape, personal touch; faith and art; the sensual and the cruel; forward and backward through generations of family, acknowledging loss wherever it occurs-all with her trademark tenderness and resilience. I am always interested in whatever she has to say; she is always paying attention, pointing out the places where the heart breaks, and where it mends. * Jim Daniels *
The Blue Divide: between Old Country and New; war and peace; song and silence; sea and sky; past and present; reality and perception; art and life; husband and wife; sun and storm; memory and forgetting. These are a few of the borders (and borderlands) Linda Nemec Foster explores in her twelfth collection of poems, in a voice straightforward but deepened by emotion and experience. She is both a tourist and an inhabitant everywhere: whether in Warsaw, Cleveland, Sarajevo, New York City, Geneva, Poughkeepsie, Oahu, or Ypsilanti, Foster finds the stuff of poetry and makes it real and tangible. From 'the thin line of horizon,' she reminds us that 'everything/everything is connected. Whether/we can dare to believe it or not.' * Laurel Blossom *
Rich with closely observed detail, narrative depth, and poignant historical reflections, this is a generous and beautiful collection. * Publisher's Weekly *