Full of Clewell's distinctive blend of narrative and lyric, as well as
his unabashed, idiosyncratic sense of wonder, these poems often spring
from unlikely sources: Adam and Eve's Paradisal do-over at the Jersey
shore, the misguided promise of tinfoil hats, Uncle Bud on the Moon,
Debbie Fuller on Pluto, debatable Bigfoot nomenclature, Richard Nixon's
social-media rejuvenation, and a Nebraska policeman's run-in with space
aliens who tell him, "We want you to believe in us--but not too much."
In Almost Nothing To Be Scared Of, David Clewell's most expansive work
yet, readers will discover a multiplicity of new ways to take
heart--surely no small thing in a world where we're too often asked to
take what we'd rather not.