If you enjoy music, or have ears and a pulse, you will love this book inspired by Joni Mitchell's oeuvre, with poems that "put the needle in the groove" and allow the reader to experience the way human relationships can "wreck [us] in the best way." Song is the essence in lines packed with internal rhyme and assonance and the drumbeat rhythms of heart and breath. These poems surge and ebb on a river of human emotion. They have an edge, often bestowed by paradox as the speaker, a "chaste little heretic," finds her way to a kind of neap-tide quietude, a place of adult experience mellowed by wisdom and an earned gratitude.-Rebecca Foust, author of Paradise Drive (Press 53, 2018) and ONLY (Four Way Books, 2022)
Elizabeth Majerus has written a love letter to the artist and muse Joni Mitchell in Songs Are Like Tattoos, threading her own life and others into Joni's lines. Richard isn't Joni's Richard, but he's someone's, as the child given up for adoption in the poem "Little Green" is not Mitchell's daughter but another lost child who reverberates into the song. This book is an exploration of how Mitchell's work, especially the album Blue, ghosts us back to people we used to be. Majerus, a musician herself, knows the power of music: "There are opening notes / of songs that make / my body believe / I will see you soon," she says, and Joni is on every mix tape her speaker sends.-Gale Walden, author of Same Blue Chevy (Tia Chucha, 1996) and Where the Time Goes (Bedazzled Ink, 2017)