Infused with sensory detail that pulls its readers into its labyrinth of memory, What Is Fair is a construct of dissonant forces, a world of emotional exile. Throughout the collection's tales of family, love, connection, and betrayal, James Harmon Clinton seems to put into practice Elizabeth Bishop's exhortation to "practice losing farther, losing faster." But loss is not disaster and the accumulation of things lost becomes the important...
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Poetry