I want to use these wonderful meta-fables and homemade fairy tales as poetry prompts. My poem after Katrina Roberts' [you claim never to have peered into a mirror to see a cannibal?], for example, might involve a soup can or mention the pen & ink quirks of Andy Warhol. LIKENESS is a veritable inspiration engine. Even the table of contents reads like a brilliant cento of poetry. In fact, I doubt Roberts distinguishes writing and drawing: every sumptuous line is a poem. -Terrance Hayes
What curious wilderness might come from allowing the visual to occupy more fully the space of text-lest we've forgotten, too, that text is visual? In LIKENESS, Roberts is both auger & answer. At once a prophecy of potential for the flexibility of language & fresh confirmation of the fact of our own imaginations, these poems are unconfined & still razor-sharp in their generosity. I have waited for a collection like this. LIKENESS is a thrilling & necessary addition to our understanding of multiplicity & its joy. -Meg Day
LIKENESS reminds me of Donald Winnicott saying of Francis Bacon, "in looking at faces he seems to need to be painfully striving towards being seen, which is at the basis of creative looking." Roberts's "faces" and portraits are disfigured with the ordinary objects of our everyday piecing together lyrical vignettes of Life. What I love best about these delightful creatures is that they show us the humor and tragedy of our own heads: songs of the psyche, in bright and colorful poised solace, carrying and embracing one another. This is a gorgeous and enchanting book. -Bianca Stone