Poetry and Prose about Bereavement: Denise Riley’s “Say Something Back” and “Time Lived without Its Flow” (New York Review Books, 143 pp., $16.00 [paper])

From the website of New York Review Books (Link):

The British poet Denise Riley is one of the finest and most individual writers at work in English today. With her striking musical gifts, she is as happy in traditional forms as experimental, and though her poetry has a kinship to that of the New York School, at heart she is unaligned with any tribe. A distinguished philosopher and feminist theorist as well as a poet, Riley has produced a body of work that is both intellectually uncompromising and emotionally open. This book, her first collection of poems to appear with an American press, includes Riley’s widely acclaimed recent volume Say Something Back, a lyric meditation on bereavement composed, as she has written, “in imagined solidarity with the endless others whose adult children have died, often in far worse circumstances.” Riley’s new prose work, Time Lived, Without Its Flow, returns to the subject of grief, just as grief returns in memory to be continually relived.

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Review of Steve Leder, The Beauty of What Remains: How Our Greatest Fear Becomes Our Greatest Gift (New York: Avery [Penguin], 2021). Pp. 228.

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Children’s Grief Awareness Day