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In her second collection of poetry, Learning to See in Three Dimensions, Pamela Spiro Wagner takes us deep into an exploration of the human condition by delving into the worlds of relationships, religion, nature, and mental health. In each poem-and through each intense piece of original artwork included in the book-we are led up to a line and dared to cross it into a new paradigm of understanding the world. In Mosaic we are challenged to understand assembling beauty from broken things ; in State Property we are led to consider how with one aching brick at a time, / some walls are built, others are torn down… ; in Friday Night Vigil we must reconcile How lovely the world is, although it’s dying. Just as powerful and original as Wagner’s insights is her description: like the poplar / still spilling her yellow dress / to the insistent fingertips of fall in When I Lose You and in Afterwards, What the Mother Said, in which Wagner writes of the mother of a jihadist martyr, But had I known of his plans / I would have taken a blade, sliced open my heart and crammed him deep inside. // I would have seamed it tight to seal him in. / I would have never let him go. In this rich, full collection, Wagner’s poetry pulls us into new territory through her alternating playfulness, hope, and, especially in the superb section Poems In Which I Speak Frankly, courage, a courage from which we all have much to learn.
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In her second collection of poetry, Learning to See in Three Dimensions, Pamela Spiro Wagner takes us deep into an exploration of the human condition by delving into the worlds of relationships, religion, nature, and mental health. In each poem-and through each intense piece of original artwork included in the book-we are led up to a line and dared to cross it into a new paradigm of understanding the world. In Mosaic we are challenged to understand assembling beauty from broken things ; in State Property we are led to consider how with one aching brick at a time, / some walls are built, others are torn down… ; in Friday Night Vigil we must reconcile How lovely the world is, although it’s dying. Just as powerful and original as Wagner’s insights is her description: like the poplar / still spilling her yellow dress / to the insistent fingertips of fall in When I Lose You and in Afterwards, What the Mother Said, in which Wagner writes of the mother of a jihadist martyr, But had I known of his plans / I would have taken a blade, sliced open my heart and crammed him deep inside. // I would have seamed it tight to seal him in. / I would have never let him go. In this rich, full collection, Wagner’s poetry pulls us into new territory through her alternating playfulness, hope, and, especially in the superb section Poems In Which I Speak Frankly, courage, a courage from which we all have much to learn.