-Ernest Hilbert, author of Last One Out
By turns, sexy, daring, and self-questioning, Joanne Leva's Eve indeed heads back and shares with us the transit of her life from the Garden to motherhood to her life post-Adam. The older Eve may sense "her Goddess departing," but, always resilient, she forges ahead. An associative brilliance informs these fast-paced verses that capture Eve's sauciness, her pain, and duty to bear witness to her life. These poems are compelling and profound, and, above all, they tell this Eve's story with compassion.
-Lynn Levin, author of The Minor Virtues
How could you not want to read a book that begins "God walks into a bar/and says, Let there be light!/ Eve holds her Zippo/ lighter in the air," In Joanne Leva's Eve Heads Back Adam's wife gets to continue telling the story she began in Leva's first book, and she does so with wit and courage; the recognition of the darkness in our lives but also the honoring of the light. We carry that light with us, just as Eve carries her Zippo at the ready. Open this book. There is so much light inside.
-Christopher Bursk, author of The Improbable Swervings of Atoms