Description The scariest sentence in the English language is brief, threatening, and hopeful.
He is a cabinetmaker and lives with his family in Summit Point, West Virginia..
His poem "The Egg Suckers" received the 2005 James Boatwright Prize from Shenandoah literary magazine.
And then I made breakfast." -- David Kirby About the Author Steve Scafidi is the author of the poetry collection Sparks from a Nine-Pound Hammer, winner of the Larry Levis Reading Prize.
Re-reading \'The Egg Suckers, \' I laughed again.
Like Theodore Roethke, Scafidi describes a nature that is at least as nasty as it is nice and then lets us know that -- oops -- we\'re on the menu, too.
It reminds us that things are constantly happening beneath our very feet, that a secret history is being forged that we\'ll never read about in the newspapers.
He is a cabinetmaker and lives with his family in Summit Point, West Virginia."Steve Scafidi\'s poem \'The Egg Suckers\' made me laugh, fidget, and ponder my own path through this omnivorous world.
His poem "The Egg Suckers" received the 2005 James Boatwright Prize from Shenandoah literary magazine.
Steve Scafidi is the author of the poetry collection Sparks from a Nine-Pound Hammer, winner of the Larry Levis Reading Prize.
Here is a brief and hopeful book.
Here is the dangerous world we all have in common.
In Poems both meditative and defiant he mourns the eventual loss of all that we Love and finds consolation, wherever possible, in the rhythm of Common words and "the sacred guesswork" of the imagination.
This second collection by Steve Scafidi is haunted by the possible and "the bells of the verb to be" that "ring-a-ding-ding calling us / to the holy dark of this first / warm night of Spring." When anything is possible, Scafidi finds, horror is as likely as delight.
It is deceptive, simple, and as Common as water: anything is possible.
Description The scariest sentence in the English language is brief, threatening, and hopeful