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Poets of the Monterey Bay

 
cover Pomegranate

by Debra Spencer

Debra Spencer

Praise for Pomegranate:

 
“Smart, funny, tender, with an imagination wide open to the world, Debra Spencer is a poet with a clear, vibrant, no-nonsense voice.  In poem after poem of childhood, of sex and love, of giving birth and witnessing death, she gives us the whole arc of essential discovery and delight.”
        —Rosie King

“The humor and pathos of everyday miracles find their home in Debra Spencer’s poetry.  She’s a poet of visions and visitations—whether she’s re-envisioning the painfulness of adolescence, speculating on the history of a condom in the street, or tuning in to her body while singing.  The resulting poems are truly spiritual.”
        —David Sullivan

“I’ve always felt a distinct difference between poetry and art.  The former, while engaging, is often conformist; the latter takes chances, prompts thought.  In a preponderance of her poems, Debra Spencer is an artist.”
        —Joseph McNeilly, author of In Here

“Debra Spencer’s Pomegranate is a trick-or-treat bag—full of surprises and delights.

We may be beggars and wanderers—children, lovers, and fools.  And yet, ‘we know what lies at the heart of life’—so says the narrator of Spencer’s ‘The Library at Alexandria.’ ‘All are welcome here.’

Maybe if Edna St. Vincent Millay had grown up in the San Fernando Valley in the sixties, and Santa Cruz in the seventies and beyond, she would have written such poems.  The voice is playful, pure, wry, passionate—at once commonplace and hilarious, dreamy and familiar.

In Pomegranate, you’re in your old neighborhood, but all things are possible: little girls might decide to be boys; 300 pound men might dance like weightless angels; parents of teens will act like young lovers; and just maybe Clint Eastwood is Stan Laurel’s son.  What will the beggar say?  How will the commune turn out; where will the hitchhiker lead you?

In ‘A Man Comes to the Middle of His Life,’ another California poet, Dennis Schmitz wrote: ’We weep for our strangeness.‘  In Debra Spencer’s Pomegranate, we are gloriously strange, but we do not weep.

Like in the better Raymond Carver poems and stories, we marvel or laugh; we are reminded of our own humanity.”
        —Ken Weisner, author of The Sacred Geometry of Pedestrians

 

Debra Spencer invented her own alphabet when she was three.  She wrote her first book in the second grade and went on to earn a BA from the University of California at Santa Cruz in 1972 and an MA from San Jose State University in 1988, where she won the Anne Lillis Memorial Scholarship for Poetry.  In her desk she keeps a Bart Giammati baseball card, a fossilized shark’s tooth, the tuning key to an Anglian harp, and a piece of the Berlin Wall.  She works at Cabrillo College as a learning disabilities specialist, and sings with Community Music School of Santa Cruz.


Pomegranate by Debra Spencer.  September 23, 2004.
96 pages, paperback, $12, ISBN 0-9716373-8-5

 
Poems by Debra Spencer

Copyright 2004