When Kathleen Driskell pulled an old edition of Emily Post's Etiquette
from the used bookstore shelf and blew dust off the blue linen cover,
she instantly found herself and her family within those pages--not as
the Worldlys, Oldlineages, or the Gildings (archetypes Post created to
demonstrate how to properly manage a grand house full of servants), but
as the housemaids, cooks, and useful men working for those very rich.
The noted poet--whose collection Seed Across Snow was twice listed as
a national bestseller by the Poetry Foundation--explores class, the
workplace, and those tense interactions between the haves and the have
nots in her new collection. As America watches its middle-class quickly
decline, Blue Etiquette rings with relevance.