Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
Quiet wonder and clear-eyed serenity flow through Michael P. Hill’s poems, which find the sacred in the everyday and the modest in the sacred: a stranger’s grief at the vet’s office; a fisherman’s view of a stalking heron; reflections on those who’ve left us. These are works in which simplicity is celebrated, experience vividly recalled, and the natural world impeccably observed, and all of them-all-are deeply felt. One of the particular joys of Hill’s work is his apparently effortless equanimity; he’s not seeking to reassure us-that would be cheap, egotistical-but that’s precisely what these poems do in their calm embrace of the complicated multivalence of these works-in-progress we call lives. The reader enters the river with its swirling, sun-dappled surface and its teeming life below, then reemerges feeling more connected to the earth, more appreciative of the limited time we have on it, and more connected to those with whom we share it. It’s a joy.
Doug Dorst, author of S. and Alive in Necropolis
Michael P. Hill’s poems move with patience through the intersection of place, music, and family, all while avoiding sentimentality. Reading Junk Drawer feels like hearing a forgotten song and having it blossom into a vibrant memory. These poems are image-rich, playful, understated, and filled with careful observations about the genealogy of curating a poetic life. Whether the focus is a backyard game of catch, morning on a familiar river, or browsing in a record store, Hill’s seemingly simple forms ask us to linger on experiences we might otherwise overlook as we speed past.
Andrew Jones, author of Liner Notes
Michael P. Hill’s poems create a landscape of blue-collar beauty full of rivers, music, and family. His keen eye captures the threads that hold us close to each other and the moments and memories that make up a life well lived. Junk Drawer finds resonance in the gritty, dark corners of our world by creating a visceral intimacy with the secret world in between. It’s a collection worth coming back to again and again.
Michael Garrigan, author of Robbing the Pillars
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
Quiet wonder and clear-eyed serenity flow through Michael P. Hill’s poems, which find the sacred in the everyday and the modest in the sacred: a stranger’s grief at the vet’s office; a fisherman’s view of a stalking heron; reflections on those who’ve left us. These are works in which simplicity is celebrated, experience vividly recalled, and the natural world impeccably observed, and all of them-all-are deeply felt. One of the particular joys of Hill’s work is his apparently effortless equanimity; he’s not seeking to reassure us-that would be cheap, egotistical-but that’s precisely what these poems do in their calm embrace of the complicated multivalence of these works-in-progress we call lives. The reader enters the river with its swirling, sun-dappled surface and its teeming life below, then reemerges feeling more connected to the earth, more appreciative of the limited time we have on it, and more connected to those with whom we share it. It’s a joy.
Doug Dorst, author of S. and Alive in Necropolis
Michael P. Hill’s poems move with patience through the intersection of place, music, and family, all while avoiding sentimentality. Reading Junk Drawer feels like hearing a forgotten song and having it blossom into a vibrant memory. These poems are image-rich, playful, understated, and filled with careful observations about the genealogy of curating a poetic life. Whether the focus is a backyard game of catch, morning on a familiar river, or browsing in a record store, Hill’s seemingly simple forms ask us to linger on experiences we might otherwise overlook as we speed past.
Andrew Jones, author of Liner Notes
Michael P. Hill’s poems create a landscape of blue-collar beauty full of rivers, music, and family. His keen eye captures the threads that hold us close to each other and the moments and memories that make up a life well lived. Junk Drawer finds resonance in the gritty, dark corners of our world by creating a visceral intimacy with the secret world in between. It’s a collection worth coming back to again and again.
Michael Garrigan, author of Robbing the Pillars