Enter Field Notes from an Illusion, and you will find memories that ride on steam from a cup of tea, a melody that's gotten stuck in your brain, the loss of a beloved bookstore, moving mountains made of sand, an ancestor climbing out of her photograph, the slow erasure of a mind, even a house taken back by a waiting forest. Though life offers a balance of illusion and reality, poetry invites us to break free and take a new look at the illusory, the fantastical and the what-if and to toss it all around in our imaginations and on the page. Lois Levinson's poems ask us to explore the diminishing and endangered through the lenses of reflection, moonlight, decay, misperception, imminent loss, and hope.
-Mark Doty, Winner of the National Book Award
-Madelyn Garner, author of Hum of Our Blood