Perhaps You Could Breathe For Me
by
Book Details
About the Book
The poems in Perhaps You Could Breathe For Me resemble almost too closely our own lives. On these pages are rare insights into relationships--the cruel, the complicated, the simple, the joyful, the sexy, the fearful, the painful, the intense. Newberry writes about what can go wrong, what does go wrong, about growing up, about the terrors and wonder of aging. She writes about sexuality, where it begins, and whether or not it ends. These poems are extraordinary as they journey through compassion, anger, strength, and universality. The cadences of ordinary speech make this work accessible, and, still, suggest that something rare and exciting is about to happen. Throughout and finally, Newberry’s poems resonate with a search for spirituality—“for a God,” she says “we pray to, but do not know how to love.”
About the Author
Martina Reisz Newberry lives in Hollywood, California with her husband, Brian, a gifted graphic/web designer and their cat and dictator, Gato. An only child, she has kept herself company by writing since she was 7 years old. She is both a poet and a novelist. Ms. Newberry has been widely published in literary magazines in the U.S. and abroad. Two of her books, The Banyan and the Alder and Not Untrue and Not Unkind were published by Arabesques Press in Algeria and will be included in Algeria’s first National Library. Her most recent books are HUNGER and AFTER THE EARTHQUAKE.