Dipped in Black Water

Kate Peper
Skip to product information

Dipped in Black Water

Kate Peper
Release date:
Paperback
Regular price $17.97
Sale price $17.97 Regular price
Final Sale. No returns or exchanges.
Oversized: This item will be shipped by appointment through our delivery partner.
Overweight: This item will be shipped by appointment through our delivery partner.

Digital download

Immediate access in your Kobo library

Deliver to

In stock online. Free shipping on orders over $49

Buy online, pick up at Bay & Floor

Free pick up today

Find it in store

Out of stock

Found in: Arts & Letters, General Poetry

Earn 90 plum points and save more with plum Rewards. Learn more

View full details
Promotional Details
  • Published date: May 19, 2017
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 40
  • Publisher: Finishing Line Press
  • ISBN: 9781635342284
  • Dimensions: 5.5" W x 0.1" L x 8.5" H

An exciting new voice in poetry. Dipped in Black Water is a book full of wisdom, compassion, and vitality. Peper writes with verve and a delight in language, and her exact descriptions and surprising images--having a religious experience in Ikea, breaking up with a lover while watching a dead dog float down the Mississippi River --catch us off balance, wake us up, and make us see.

--Ellery Akers, author of Practicing the Truth

Mother, father, daughter and also the past and the present are woven into this compelling book. Kate Peper's poems are both sharp and intimate as she writes about nature, human nature, and science. In many of these poems, her focus is on loss and on medical imperfections of the body, including her own. Yet still, always, her work has light, hope, and a sense of the triumph of the spirit. "Happiness, stay next to me," Peper writes. It does, and reading her poems helps happiness stay near me, too.

--Susan Terris, author of Ghost of Yesterday

Dipped in Black Water arrives steeped in the fascination--you could almost call it Gothic--with deviations from the norm, particularly the exotic imperfections of the body. The anomalous, the freakish, the rejected, the doomed--"the dark thing in the corner"--are the figures by which Kate Peper measures her own flaws and empathy and mortality and, especially, resilient spirit. After a deeply unsettling diagnosis, she articulates a kind of prayer. Beauty and terror (and gratefully, humor) abide in these poems in a kind of uneasy yet enduring equilibrium the reader does not soon forget.

--Thomas Centolella, Winner 2015 Dorset Prize for his manuscript, Almost Human, published in 2017 by Tupelo Press

Recently Viewed