With her photography and poetry, Anne M. Hicks points
the reader toward an uneasy, unpredictable future by merging image and
word at the very outset, showing us fruit "Almost Ready to Pick"
and suggesting the reader to "forget the future
" in the
first poem "(I'm) easy." From there she moves us through loss,
pain, and redemption throughout this collection, which made me want to
read and reread these poems, as well as contemplate the photos and their
significance for both the poet and the reader. She weaves memory, desire,
love, anger, humor, and hope into a unique tapestry of honest introspection
and observation. This is a collection to encounter and delight in.
--Jonathan K. Rice
Editor/Publisher of Iodine Poetry Journal
Behind every line in these sensual, honest poems lingers
the tragic loss of a father. The compelling poems in Floating a Full Boat leave a lump
in the reader's throat -- of anguish, of trying to make sense of death
-- and rise above the hand that has been dealt. These poems are "worth
that last note of woe."
--Maureen Sherbondy
(After the Fairy Tale, Praying at Coffee Shops, The Slow
Vanishing)
Poet Anne Hicks must have been thinking of Noah's Ark
when she titled her book Floating a Full Boat. Pairings abound. Well-crafted poems are mated with well-composed
photos. Themes run in twos, or multiples thereof. There are at least two
poems each about adolescence, sex, suicide, SCUBA diving and killing roaches,
but the overarching theme is desire. Hicks writes of "basic wants
contained too long" and of being "inebriated with wanting."
Indeed, Floating a Full Boat is filled to the gunwales with desire in various
forms both corporeal and ethereal. Read it for the body and the spirit.
--Richard Allen Taylor
Co-editor KAKALAK