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Eve Would Know dramatizes an iconic story rewound into a 21st Century bio-pic starring a completely contemporary Eve. The voice is tart, tough, vernacular, with the punch of stand-up that unearths the seed of truth buried in the story you thought you knew. But the Eve of these poems is stripping the old story bare to come to terms with her new self, made in her own image. An exciting mix of the dramatic, the narrative and the lyric, this is a tangy performance of the eternal feminine, not as a mystery or a spirit but as a fleshed-out woman on her hands/ and obedient knees, bracing/ for the familiar thrust inward. Joanne Leva has a sharp instinct for the ironic twist of phrase and the dramatic situation that upends comedy and splits open its tragic core. Lean in and listen up to her fresh, pithy, wise poems. J.C.Todd, author of What Space This Body
Joanne Leva’s Eve Would Know is a fearless book that gives an entirely fresh look at the story of Eden. We have Eve in the Green Room, Adam agreeing to a body double, Eve munching on turnips and dry biscuits, Adam suffering from hemorrhoids, Adam ordering a bottle of Pinot Grigio, Eve rolling cigarettes. In this delightfully invigorating embrace of anachronisms, Leva reminds us that this first fall from grace is repeated in our own lives. The final poem in the book is appropriately titled Pulling for the Heroine, and we do pull for Eve, but not just for her. This brave and intelligent book helps us to understand our own losses of innocence, the compromises we make to bear these losses, and, most importantly the triumph of the human spirit in surviving expulsion from the garden. John Milton and Joanne Leva may seem odd traveling companions, but they journey down the same road and they give us the courage to go with them as together we face this fallen world we have inherited. If language is a by-product of this Fall, it is a glorious one. This is a glorious book.
Christopher Bursk, author of The Improbable Swervings of Atoms
Joanne Leva’s Eve Would Know recreates the whole history of female desire-from abject subjugation to survival, from the ugliness of cruelty to protection, independence, and grace. Encouraging us to cast off chifforobe/ high heels/ or negligee, Leva instructs us to instead transform…into a cluster of exotic blossoms, setting ourselves free from all that binds us, confines us, and hems us in. Much like Anne Sexton’s, Joanne Leva’s poems spring to life out of a palpable darkness, embracing the power of the imagination to whirl us into a brilliant future.
Ethel Rackin, author of The Forever Notes and Go On
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Eve Would Know dramatizes an iconic story rewound into a 21st Century bio-pic starring a completely contemporary Eve. The voice is tart, tough, vernacular, with the punch of stand-up that unearths the seed of truth buried in the story you thought you knew. But the Eve of these poems is stripping the old story bare to come to terms with her new self, made in her own image. An exciting mix of the dramatic, the narrative and the lyric, this is a tangy performance of the eternal feminine, not as a mystery or a spirit but as a fleshed-out woman on her hands/ and obedient knees, bracing/ for the familiar thrust inward. Joanne Leva has a sharp instinct for the ironic twist of phrase and the dramatic situation that upends comedy and splits open its tragic core. Lean in and listen up to her fresh, pithy, wise poems. J.C.Todd, author of What Space This Body
Joanne Leva’s Eve Would Know is a fearless book that gives an entirely fresh look at the story of Eden. We have Eve in the Green Room, Adam agreeing to a body double, Eve munching on turnips and dry biscuits, Adam suffering from hemorrhoids, Adam ordering a bottle of Pinot Grigio, Eve rolling cigarettes. In this delightfully invigorating embrace of anachronisms, Leva reminds us that this first fall from grace is repeated in our own lives. The final poem in the book is appropriately titled Pulling for the Heroine, and we do pull for Eve, but not just for her. This brave and intelligent book helps us to understand our own losses of innocence, the compromises we make to bear these losses, and, most importantly the triumph of the human spirit in surviving expulsion from the garden. John Milton and Joanne Leva may seem odd traveling companions, but they journey down the same road and they give us the courage to go with them as together we face this fallen world we have inherited. If language is a by-product of this Fall, it is a glorious one. This is a glorious book.
Christopher Bursk, author of The Improbable Swervings of Atoms
Joanne Leva’s Eve Would Know recreates the whole history of female desire-from abject subjugation to survival, from the ugliness of cruelty to protection, independence, and grace. Encouraging us to cast off chifforobe/ high heels/ or negligee, Leva instructs us to instead transform…into a cluster of exotic blossoms, setting ourselves free from all that binds us, confines us, and hems us in. Much like Anne Sexton’s, Joanne Leva’s poems spring to life out of a palpable darkness, embracing the power of the imagination to whirl us into a brilliant future.
Ethel Rackin, author of The Forever Notes and Go On