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Rooms Overhead

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A collection of poems by Betsy Sholl.

72 pages, Paperback

First published July 1, 1986

9 people want to read

About the author

Betsy Sholl

24 books12 followers
Betsy Sholl has published seven collections of poetry, most recently Rough Cradle (Alice James Books, 2009). Don't Explain won the 1997 Felix Pollak Prize from the University of Wisconsin, and her book The Red Line won the 1991 AWP Prize for Poetry. Her chapbooks include Pick A Card, winner of the Maine Chapbook Competition in 1991, and Betsy Sholl: Greatest Hits, 1974-2004, Pudding House Publications. She was a founding member of Alice James Books and published three collections with them: Changing Faces, Appalachian Winter and Rooms Overhead. Among her awards are a fellowship from the National Endowment of the Arts, and two Maine Writer's Fellowships. Her work has been included in several anthologies, including Letters to America, Contemporary American Poetry on Race, and a range of magazines, including Field, Triquarterly, Brilliant Corners, The Kenyon Review, The Massachusetts Review, Beloit Poetry Journal. She has been a visiting poet at the University of Pittsburgh and Bucknell University. She lives in Portland, Maine, and teaches at the University of Southern Maine and in the MFA Program of Vermont College.

As of March 1, 2006, Betsy Sholl was chosen to be the Poet Laureate of Maine, a five-year position named by the governor.

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1,754 reviews54 followers
June 2, 2016
This one didn't do it for me in the way that the amazing Rough Cradle did. For the first half of the collection, I felt distant from it and surprised by how little I was liking it compared to my earlier response to Sholl's poetry. I definitely came around with the second half, though, and enjoyed it much more than the first (hence the 4 star rating).

Still very much looking forward to reading more from her, but I would personally suggest Rough Cradle over this if you've never read her.
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