Came Home to Winter
poems by Judith Skillman
ISBN: 978-0-9991062-7-3
86 pages; 6 x 9; $16.95
Publication date early 2019
Available now
Also by Judith Skillman, Kafka's Shadow (Deerbrook Editions 2017)
Judith Skillman is author of sixteen collections of poetry, including Kafka’s Shadow, House of Burnt Offerings , and The Phoenix: New & Selected Poems . She is the recipient of an Eric Mathieu King Fund Award from the Academy of American Poets for her book Storm (Blue Begonia Press). Her poems have appeared in Poetry, Shenandoah, Prairie Schooner, Zyzzyva, Nasty Women Poets , and numerous other journals and anthologies.
Review in Mom Egg Review
From the back cover
There is something about these pieces that is chill without being icy or bitter, wise without being cynical, and as striking as slanted autumn light glimpsed through tree branches.
— The Pedestal Magazine
Judith Skillman takes up again the tools of naturalistic observation and mythical allusion to examine difficult truths about the interior life of the self and its drives toward intimacy and seclusion, eroticism and entropy, as well as the paradox and complexity inherent in familial relationships. Skillman's tone is occasionally lofty but most often direct, incisive, unflinching.
— Janelle Elyse Kihlstrom, The Iowa Review
Skillman's world is strangely fluid, yet layered with complexities that complement one moment and subtly contradict the next…
—Katherine Soniat, author of Bright Stranger & The Swing Girl
I believe it was Rimbaud who said that genius is the ability to recall one’s entire childhood. Whether or not Judith Skillman can recall her entire childhood I cannot say, but what she does recall—and it’s a great deal—she turns into poems of compelling and aching urgency. Came Home to Winter is populated with seamlessly crafted poems not only born of memories of childhood and youth but of the natural world, of Shakespeare’s The Tempest, and of the sorrows and joys of life lived now. This collection is another brilliant milestone in a long and distinguished journey through poetry.
—J.R. Solonche, author of Beautiful Day