How to Monetize Despair is a captivating exploration of a wide range of subjects and ideas, from traumatic loss and the sorrows of human relationships to the natural but absurd world of neurotic caterpillars and philosophical cockroaches. With a unique blend of imagery, self-help inspired titles, and Mottolo's peculiar brand of humor, this collection takes readers on a one-of-a-kind journey through human experience. This collection is a must-read for anyone seeking to explore the complexities of trauma and struggle, and to encounter a sea creature or butterfly along the way.
In How To Monetize Despair, Lisa Motollo captures the intricate and sometimes random thoughts and feelings that arise when dealing with life's most difficult chapters: trauma, grief, loss, and the mundane.
This collection beautifully balances the vulnerabilities and agonies of grief with the dark humor and odd realizations that come with experiencing trauma. But it also muses on the anxieties a person can feel attending a party or during everyday activities like making a sandwich.
Life is full of many experiences that we either don't want to discuss or even know how to discuss, but How To Monetize Despair is a beautiful example of how to start and navigate those conversations.
--- Indie Book Review
Lisa Mottolo's How to Monetize Despair transforms devastation into clean-burning fuel, complicating and ultimately exploding the concept of self-help. These poems are dark, playful, and surreal, examining the threshold between life and death, juxtaposing flourishes of nature with vulnerabilities of the body and things we leave behind. In "Destroying a Flower" the speaker observes, "It's funny, we see fleetingness as sad / as though it would be good if everything lasted forever, // giving us enough time to get sick of everything." How to Monetize Despair is a stunning debut from a poet with remarkable range.
---Mary Biddinger, author of Department of Elegy
"Here is a poet sparring in the darkness--bloodied fists swinging through empty midnight air and somehow landing every punch in every poem."
---Dan Sicoli, Co-editor of Slipstream and author of Pagan Supper.
"Mottolo writes for us the self-help book we most deserve: it doesn't make us better than, but reveals who we are... "A ruby-throated hummingbird came up the window / and I missed it because I was reading a poem about God." Even our effort to be good divorces us from the good. And yet-and yet these poems are so profoundly tender in their unsparing insights that the book reads not as an indictment, but a strange book of innocence."
---Dan Beachy-Quick, Poet, Writer, and Critic