CARIBOU
ISBN: 978-0-9981963-7-4
Pub Date: Mar. 2018
Pages: 80
By Thomas Mitchell
These are poems of careful observation, of a noticing so acute that every detail—“hillsides sizzling with red sumacs,” “yesterday’s dishes / left by the sink,” “the hard crackling of twigs under feet,” crows “rehearsing their dark theatrics”—claims its rightful significance in our imaginations. With scenes that open gently in suggestions that are subtle and satisfying, Thomas Mitchell’s poems do what the best poems do: they assist our concentration, allowing us to encounter the beauty and relevance of all that is around us.
—Albert Garcia, author of Rainshadow, Skunk Talk, and A Meal Like That
These poems praise the natural world, the rocks and hills and plants of the West. They’re in love with its animals, insects and birds, fully alive to the moment, yet haunted throughout by a dim nostalgia. I most admire their clear language and close attention, in the tradition of Jim Harrison and Wendell Berry.
—Joseph Millar, author of Kingdom, Blue Rust, Fortune, and Overtime


