Publisher's Synopsis
Ivory Cradle is the winner of the third annual American Poetry Review /Honickman First Book Prize, as chosen by poet Robert Creeley. In his introduction, Creeley writes, "now and again one comes upon a story so quietly and articulately told that it stays in mind long after, echoing, recasting the usual frames of reference and order, making whatever it is the world had been thought to be, quite changed and even, again, unknown." Ivory Cradle is such a story as it charts a personal journey through questions of faith and history, with its anger redeemed by passion and the transformative power of art.from "Morning in Florence"I was out the door and halfway to the elevatorWhen he threatened to throwmy clothes into the lobby. With the baby to think ofI had to know when to stay or goSo I headed out alone into the consoling brown lightOff the river, feeling the childSwimming carefully inside me as I walked to seeFra Angelico's frescoes in cellsWhere monks once slept and knelt, contemplatedAnd vanished; where in rapture he workedfast as the plaster dried to get light to wash the wallthe way God would have done it"Ivory Cradle announces a poet fully formed, fully mature, and wild to say things in ways they've never been said before. Rarely, very rarely, is a so-sane heart so beautifully articulated. This is not just an exceptional first book, it is a flat-out exceptional book, period." —Thomas Lux"Reading Anne Marie Macari's poems I think of Jane Kenyon, in her kindred humor, quietness, fierceness, and plain integrity. But this poet is 'flowering dark.'"—Jean ValentineAnne Marie Macari lives in Mt. Kisco, New York.