"Her poems [are]...a particular and splendid instance of what Hopkins
meant by 'proper poetry, the language of inspiration.'"--Richard
Howard
Political outrage rustles the high grasses of these ingenious lyrics,
which often employ the ecologies of both the Florida panhandle and the
Aegean coast to slyly portray humanity's foibles. Formally inventive
(included is a series of "monosonnets"), Wade's is a boisterous poetry,
one that takes pleasure in itself even during its conniptions of
incredulity at the behavior of people in power (and in particular one
dubiously elected president).