Margaret Randall's most recent collection of poems, Out of Violence
Into Poetry, was written over these past few years when language itself
was violated by a president who lied until each lie, repeated often
enough, resembled a terrible truth in the public discourse. Reality,
sanity, beauty: all bend and run the risk of breaking when distorted
beyond recognition. These poems consciously restore language to its
natural habitat. They deal with history, memory, loss, life, death, and
promise. They address love and aging. They become a welcome refuge at a
time of uncertainty and take us on disparate journeys that often have
surprising twists. There is humor as well as rage. We cannot leave it to
the politicians alone to give words their meaning back. That is the job
of poets, and this book does that job well. Randall is the author of
nearly 200 books, spanning more than six decades. Out of Violence into
Poetry may well be her finest collection of poetry to date.