Pretend the World confronts our false sense of safety in our
self-created worlds. From her St. Paul kitchen to the historical shores
of Lake Superior, from an airplane above Bagdad to a clothing factory in
Guangdong, Kathryn Kysar pretends the glimmering and the sordid in these
honest, searing poems that explore the inequities, cracks, and fissures
in women's constructed lives.
Kathryn Kysar is the author of Dark Lake (Loonfeather Press,
2002), a book of poetry, and is the editor of Riding Shotgun: Women
Write About Their Mothers (Borealis Books, 2008). She has received
fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the
Anderson Center, and she has published poems in many anthologies and
magazines, including Great River Review, Mizna, and Painted Bride
Quarterly. She serves on the board of directors for the Association of
Writers and Writing Programs.