by Heather Dubrow early in the morning, before the heat inside is unbearable, try walking your anger on an imperious leash. Remember that our city has “pooper scooper” laws, so clean up what that anger deposits near your feet, unfortunately never in the gutters where such matter and matters belong. And when Fido refuses to […]
Author: Heather Dubrow
Heather Dubrow is the author of Forms and Hollows (Cherry Grove Collections/WordTech), Lost and Found Departments (Cornerstone Press), and two chapbooks. Two of her poems were set to music and performed, and a play was produced by a community theater; the journals where her poetry has previously appeared include Prairie Schooner, Southern Review, and the Yale Review. She has also published several books of literary criticism. Director of Fordham's Poets Out Loud reading series 2009-2020, she holds the John D. Boyd, SJ, Chair in Poetic Imagination there. She is currently president of an international organization engaged with lyric and poetics in general, INSL (International Network for the Study of Lyric).