"Each issue of "Fairy Tale Review" contains poetry, fiction, and nonfiction that either address the abiding influence of fairy tales on contemporary literature and culture, or are themselves contemporary fairy tales in prose or verse. It is, according to editor Kate Bernheimer, 'a venue for all writers working with the aesthetics and motifs of fairy tales'. "Fairy Tale Review's" first four issues ("The Blue Issue, 2005"; "The Green Issue ..."
Phoenix Poets Rare High Meadow of Which I Might Dream by ConnieVoisine 72 Pages, Published 2010 by University Of Chicago Press ISBN-13: 978-0-226-86353-5, ISBN: 0-226-86353-0
"Rare High Meadow of Which I Might Dream is a book haunted by the afterlife of medieval theology and literature yet grounded in distinctly modern quandaries of desire."
Phoenix Poets Calle Florista by ConnieVoisine 96 Pages, Published 2015 by University Of Chicago Press ISBN-13: 978-0-226-29546-6, ISBN: 0-226-29546-X
"This is mature work, offering us poems that oscillate between the articulation of complex, private sensibilities and the directness of a poet cracking the private self open—and making it vulnerable to the wider world."
Calle Florista (Phoenix Poets) by ConnieVoisine Paperback, 88 Pages, Published 2015 by University Of Chicago Press ISBN-13: 978-0-226-29532-9, ISBN: 0-226-29532-X
"This World and That One Sometimes you defy it,I am not that, watching a stranger cry like a dog when she thinks she’s alone at the kitchen window, hands forgotten under the running tap. The curtains blow out, flap the other side of the sill. In you one hole fills another, stacked like cups. You remember your hands. Connie Voisine’s third book of poems centers on the border between the United States and Mexico, celebrating the stunning, ..."
Cathedral Of The North(1st Edition) (Pitt Poetry Series) by ConnieVoisine Paperback, 80 Pages, Published 2001 by University Of Pittsburgh Press ISBN-13: 978-0-8229-5737-9, ISBN: 0-8229-5737-X
"Set against a fantastic backdrop of religious imagery, myth and dreams, science fiction, and the stark realities of a northern factory town, Voisine's poems carefully detail the life of a common hero and his family."
"The Bird is Her ReasonThere are some bodies that emerge into desire as a godrises from the sea, emotion and memory hang like dripping clothes—this want is like entering that heated red on the mouth of a Delacroix lion, stalwart, always that red which makesmy teeth ..."