Grist is a collection that explores the connection between body and spirit. The poems are honest and often devastating, just as the body itself when faced with trauma. The poems are visceral and intuitive, yet plainly spoken. The chapbook moves in sections to deal with themes of connection, loss, and grief, all while asking the reader to feel these, often painful, sensations in the physical body.
Kate Peterson earned her MFA from Eastern Washington University, where she is now teaching composition as an adjunct. Her poetry has appeared or is forthcoming from Sugar House Review, Packingtown Review, Aethlon, Glassworks, and The Sierra Nevada Review, among others. Kate is originally from New Jersey but has made Spokane her home. This is her first published collection. She can be reached at www.katelaurenpeterson.tumblr.com.
I read every poem multiple times, and I wasn't bored by any of them. Each poem is layered so carefully and tenderly and it's one of those things that I look at and my attention is captured, I can't look away.
Peterson's poetry is easy to read, so if you're not a poem-reading person, don't worry; the language is accessible and deeply resonant. But don't think that that accessibility means "shallow"; it's anything but.
I had to work through this collection slowly and carefully and I'm so glad I did; every time I encountered a new piece, something within it felt relevant and stirring.