<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>The candid poems in Gianna Russo's <em>One House Down</em> are grounded in experiences of ambivalence and oneness, not unlike those we sometimes find in true love. Russo ruminates on the past and scrutinizes the present in her hometown of Tampa with honest affection, concern, anger and delight. She asks an essential question: How can we treasure a place whose history and values have sometimes supported injustice? And if those wrongs are still evident today--then what? With family roots in Tampa that go back over a century, Russo skillfully pursues an answer in these inventive, surprising poems.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>". . . happiness is a snow globe, our house glued inside . . ." This is what I feel when reading <em>One House Down</em>, this fantasy in verse, this beauty contained in sprawling lines and stanzas. Each poem, a song. Each song, a swoon. Russo's newest collection is both a love song and an indictment of a place she knows so well, a Florida without palms and sun, a Florida that is grit, a Florida that represents our world-one which breaks the heart and heals it in the same beat.--Ira Sukrungruang, author of <em>In Thailand It Is Night </em></p><p><em>One House Down</em> is filled with story-poems from the unsung American South, where natural beauty butts up against strip malls and human ugliness. Tracing her family's history in Tampa, a city many readers will be surprised to visit, Russo documents with terrific detail a diverse and fascinating culture in this original exploration of a very particular place.--Heather Sellers, author of <em>You Don't Look Like Anyone I Know: a True Story of Family, Face-Blindness and Forgiveness </em></p><p>Get ready. You've read the tour-de-force of an opening sentence, a poem hurdling you into the world of <em>One House Down</em>. Now watch Gianna Russo illuminate histories so electric and elegiac, and shadows of shame so persistent, they're writ in our bones. Yes, this is a book very much about place; but, more importantly, this wonderful collection examines the emotional spaces we occupy as we strive for satisfaction, safety, and meaning. As Russo writes, "Flash at sunset like the luck I never spied."--Erica Dawson, author of <em>When Rap Spoke Straight to God</em></p><p>From front porches to the places where we live, work, and love, to the highways that lead us both out of the city and back home again, <em>One House Down</em> takes us on a precise and lovingly rendered tour of the rhythms, movements, and loves of a city and its people. Gianna Russo's poems, expansive yet intimate, make a case that perhaps poetry, rather than the evening news, is the true first draft of our collective history.--Steve Kistulentz, author of <em>Panorama</em> and <em>Little Black Daydream</em></p><p> When it comes to one's place of origin, the tides are strong--the pull to hold on, and the push to let go. In this luminous, thoughtful collection, Gianna Russo explores the bittersweet legacies of old Florida. <em>One House Down </em>is rooted rooted deeply in place, whether Nebraska Avenue and Central Avenue, cultural seats such as the Fun-Lan Drive-In and the Sanwa market, or the ripe specificity of "Faedo's Bakery [as] men roll loaves / of Cuban bread, turnovers of guava paste." I appreciate Russo's musicality and her formal agility, as she experiments with ekphrasis, ghazal, pantoum, and pecha kucha. Whether the stubborn advice of the Methodist Women's Society Cookbook, or the dark chuckle of a plaster cat on a funeral home's roof, these are poems we need.--Sandra Beasley, author of <em>Count the Waves</em></p><p> </p><br>
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