"[Jim Harrison] is still close to the source...Dead Man's Float is, as its title would suggest, a flinty and psalmist look at mortality and wonder."--Los Angeles Times "Harrison sees the sacred in the world around him." --New York Times Book Review The title of this volume, 'Dead Man's Float, ' refers to a way to stay alive in the water when one has grown tired while far from shore. As a poet, however, Mr. Harrison is not passively drifting. He remains committed to language, and to what pleasures he can catch.--Dwight Garner, The New York Times "Few enough are the books I decide to keep beyond a culling or two. Barring fire or flood, Dead Man's Float will be in my library for the rest of my life. If it's the last poetry collection we get from Harrison--and I hope it isn't--it is as fine an example of his efforts as any.--Missoula Independent [H]is poems stun us simply, with the richness of the clarity, detail, and the immediacy of Harrison's voice. -Publishers Weekly Songs of Unreason, Harrison's latest collection of poetry, is a wonderful defense of the possibilities of living.--The Industrial Worker Book Review In the end, one comes to think that maybe Jim Harrison is a tiny bit closer to the heartbeat of the universe than most of us, so by a single degree of separation, we are better for it. -The Rumpus Funny and tender beneath a wry and gruff seen-it-all veneer, Harrison contemplates death, discerns divinity in every stone and leaf, and nobility in ordinary lives, and laughs at our attempts to separate ourselves from the rest of nature.--Booklist Noted novelist Harrison, also a fine poet, writes like a man reconciling the world at large with the natural world he knows well, one that still fascinates and inspires him... Harrison is heavily invested in narrative elements that range from the real to the surreal.... Highly recommended. --Library Journal, starred review