Joanne Limburg wears comic camouflage to stalk serious subjects, from
envy and guilt to bereavement and its tangled aftermath. Her often
boisterous poems celebrate the defiant vulnerability of modern women,
exploring their lives as daughters, mothers, friends and rivals, as well
as the never-ending struggle to keep body and soul on speaking terms,
while under attack from within and without - whether by boredom,
depression, insomnia, indigestion, oppression, mirrors, misogyny or just
other people. Her poems address the experience of being a Jew in the
West at this point in history, with an awareness of the debt she owes to
stubborn and resilient ancestors. This sense of a rich inheritance is
reflected in her voice, which draws on English-language poetry but also
on nursery rhymes and everyday speech, on hymns remembered from school
and the cadences of synagogue and Jewish household ritual. Shortlisted
for the Forward Prize Best First Collection.