Nine years in the making, award-winning poet Kevin Connolly's new
collection extends its author's investigation of identity, authority,
intention, and authenticity.
What is public poetry? In an age of tweets and trolls, what should it
even try to be? Through revision, redaction, ventriloquism, homage,
self-sabotage, and outright plunder, the poems in Connolly's Xiphoid
Process interrogate the alleged futility and alleged insight of
mid-life. Are we who we are simply because we'd otherwise be nothing? Or
are we (more hopefully) something parked, for a time, in time, trying to
make something useful out of the experience? Walt Whitman, Tom Petty,
Alec Baldwin, Doug Stanhope, Journey, Judd Nelson, Billy Ripken, Johnny
Weissmuller, Don Felder, Lindsay Lohan, Shiprock, NM, the police blotter
at Point Reyes Station, California, and the moons of Saturn are all
poised to make their case in the poet's latest deliberations.