Few poets' roots go deeper than the Romantics; Jill Alexander Essbaum's
reach all the way to the Elizabethans. In her Harlot one hears Herbert
and Wyatt and Donne, their parallax view of religion as sex and sex as
religion, their delight in sin, their smirking penitence, their penchant
for the conceit, their riddles and fables, their fondling and squeezing
of language. But this "postulant in the Church of the Kiss" is a
twenty-first century woman, a "strange woman" less bowed to confession
than hell-bent on fairly bragging of threesomes and more complications
than were wet-dreamt of in Mr. W. H.'s philosophy. - H. L. Hix