Description
This collection vividly traces the speaker’s journey in a psychiatric treatment facility. With precision and honesty, Honum cuts through the climate of silence surrounding mental illness and treatment. These fiercely intimate poems draw the reader into the boundaried world of a psychiatric ward, where moments of darkness exist alongside moments of humor and deep connection, and renders the natural world beyond the facility’s windows with piercing mystery and beauty.
“On the surface, Chloe Honum’s chapbook, Then Winter, is a powerfully quiet meditation on a speaker’s experiences at a psychiatric ward. But the book is really about the power of nature, nature as ‘conqueror’ in all of its beauty—Honum’s unromantic nature is the prism in which the speaker refracts her life, it’s a way for the speaker to parse or re-angle pain. Honum’s poems and voice are steely, unforgettable, and full of treasures. And her gifts are immensely palpable.” —Victoria Chang, author of The Boss
“A fly dying in a fluorescent light fixture as snow silences the outside world . . . these poems name an extreme moment with eerie delicacy, so that we are inside it.” —Nick Flynn, author of The Captain Asks for a Show of Hands
“‘Hope is anything/That travels in big leaps,’ writes Chloe Honum. Her singular chapbook leads us down the fluorescent corridors of mental hospitals, adding grace notes to the world Lowell memorialized. For quite some time it has felt like mental house poems left us with only Sexton putting on her fur coat in her closed garage with the car turned on. Yet here, hope lunges at us, as if Dickinson had decided to pole-vault out of her window. Honum takes a big leap. What pleasure to witness.” —Spencer Reece, author of The Clerk’s Tale
A Kiwi American, Chloe Honum was raised in Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand. Her first book, The Tulip-Flame (2014), was selected by Tracy K. Smith for the Cleveland State University Poetry Center First Book Prize, named a finalist for the PEN Center USA Literary Award, and won Foreword Reviews Poetry Book of the Year Award and a Texas Institute of Letters Award. She is also the author of a chapbook, Then Winter (Bull City Press, 2017).
Chloe’s poems and essays have appeared widely, including in The Paris Review, Poetry, and Academy of American Poets. Her honors include a Ruth Lilly Fellowship from the Poetry Foundation and a Pushcart Prize, as well as residency fellowships from MacDowell and Djerassi. She served as a guest poetry co-editor for the 2017 Pushcart Prize XLI anthology. Chloe holds a B.A. from Sarah Lawrence College, an M.F.A. from the University of Arkansas, and a Ph.D. from Texas Tech University. She has given lectures and readings for the University of Virginia, St. Joseph’s University, Guilford College, Heinrich-Heine University Düsseldorf, and the Ionion Center for the Arts and Culture. In 2019, she was a Grimshaw Sargeson Fellow at the Sargeson Centre in Auckland. She is currently an Associate Professor of English and Creative Writing at Baylor University. Her most recent collection is The Lantern Room (Tupelo Press, 2022). Poems from this collection were named a finalist for the Alice Fay Di Castagnola Award from the Poetry Society of America.
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