If you had to pick just one utensil from the kitchen drawer, just one piece of cutlery as tool and weapon, most of us, no doubt, would reach for the fork or knife. Both are defined by their sharpness, both can tear and cut and stab. But Jim Minick turns away from all that and in his hand wields a spoon ... Yes, a spoon-lowly and simple and dull-an implement whose usefulness is an act of holding, whose power is steadfast tenderness. And this collection-The Intimacy of Spoons-is a result of making that choice time and again, each poem showing just how the worst of what we face today-be the climate crisis or our aging bodies or our distracted, grief-stricken lives-can be fought with the weapon of empathy and grace. The result then is a book filled with dogs and birds and deep attention, each poem a spoonful of medicine to administer healing to our broken world.-Nickole Brown, author of To Those Who Were Our First Gods Jim Minick declaims, "This is how the Earth sings," and in his poems he works out a kind of peace, a form of grace, informed by a deep and loving knowledge of place, tended to with compassion and praise and a clear eyed gaze that lets nothing escape. He offers up the sound a coyote makes, explains our kinship with oak and elm, claiming this world is enough, if we'd only care for it.-Todd Davis, author of Coffin Honey and Native Species Throughout this collection, Jim Minick's own bright song traces the tender fascination he has sustained for various winged creatures over his lifetime-what they have gifted him by association, what he has learned from them, and the pleasure he has taken in rapt observation. Glimpses of mortality, ecological precarity, and Minick's many encounters with birds take us deep into a landscape of the heart with a mature poet who grieves extinction, damage, and destruction, as much as he celebrates his love for feathered creatures and their persistent songs.-Cathryn Hankla, author of Immortal Stuff
With a near-boundless affection for the overlooked and quotidian, The Intimacy of Spoons reminds us that we are surrounded by the miraculous if we but choose to notice it. From the way he recounts the small kindness of rescuing a cardinal to the philosophical depth he finds in considering the common teaspoon, it's clear Jim Minick is a poet of generosity and kindness. By turns wistful, whimsical, and wise, this is a book I'll be rereading for a long time to come. It's a delight.-Doug Van Gundy, author of A Charm Against Forgetting Here is a book that opens the kitchen drawer and finds a "mirror that fogs with breath" among the ladles. The Intimacy of Spoons shines its light into a "world made bright / by a creature who / knows dark." In these poems, Mortality is the name of a dog who will lick your face and the Fix-It Man tells of the double murder of his parents. Looking hard at logged land, Minick speaks tenderly of shade. Listening to the rain "with one ear," he extends a hand to those who want to find their "way back into the earth."-Amy Wright, author of Paper Concert