Explosive language, rough sensuousness, and an unflinching eye -- here
is a poet who doesn't look away and is committed to poetry's first
purpose: to bring song. Tombo is a book of lyrics fueled in equal
parts by realism and big-fish storytelling, a book of wanderers,
foghorns, summer rain, feral cats, and city jazz. Built on heartbreak
particulars, these poems are raw, mysterious dilations of the moments of
existence. Di Piero's work has been praised by luminaries of the poetry
world like Philip Levine, John Ashbery, Christian Wiman, the editor of
POETRY, and also by The New York Times, the Philadelphia Inquirer,
and the San Francisco Chronicle.