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An abundant and anticipatory collection of poems exploring the season of waiting that precedes adoption.From Guggenheim fellow and celebrated author Sally Keith comes an incantatory collection of poems on the transformative process of nurturing new life and the practical challenges of starting a family.In Two of Everything, Keith depicts an evocative domestic landscape. An oriole weaves a nest of âstraw, wool, horsehair, and featherâ while hopeful parents meet with social workers, compile family videos, write, sketch. Intertwined with these scenes is a candid navigation of the US adoption industry and the unique obstacles faced by queer couples. âI want Amor to promise me that everything will be alright,â says the speaker-poet. âBut she wonât.â Interviews donât go as expected, mothers withdraw from adoption conversations, âthe bees are dying again.â Torn by feelings of shame for participating in a system that commodifies children, Keithâs speaker-poet finds herself caught between longing and dismay, wondering if and how poetry can carry us through such momentsâand through the mysteries of existence. But despite their difficult subject matter, these resilient poems sing with love. Singularly thoughtful and characterized by Keithâs lush lyricism, this collection demonstrates the tenacity and tenderness needed to build âharbor, shelter, home, houseâ against all odds.Review QuotePraise for Two of EverythingâWhat a marvelous and singular book: of love lyrics, narratives, conversations, fables, aphorisms, abandoned drafts, journal entries of everyday family life, all permeated by the strange and symbolic, all woven together in a beautiful fugue. The mind that moves through these poems, wondering, mourning, treasuring, recording what night says, is precisely the humbly brilliant, attentive, wry, weird friend you wish for in the world, and can only find in true poetry.ââMatthew Zapruder, author of Story of a PoemâTwo of Everything is about waiting. When you wait for something for a long time, something that might not come, time gets strange: it becomes a plastic ham, a tennis lob that never drops, a dream baby in a sandwich bag. I love how Sally Keith parcels out time. And I love how the poems donât imagine adoption as happily-ever-after. If she gets to be a mother, this speaker will never be the Only mother. There will always be another, the first, who, despite best intentions, agreements made and kept, might âregret all of it, every bit.â What a possibility! It haunts the book, but it doesnât foreclose love. In fact, it allows loveâand beauty, and humor.ââJoy Katz, author of All You Do Is PerceiveâLook. First things first, this book is a page-turner. I mean it! Two of Everything. Of choices. Of desires. Of possibilities and heartbreaks. How does one even know what to hope for? And what does it mean when a dream comes true and then thereâs a whole other world of choices ahead of us? Whatâs love? What if you never get what you want while youâre getting exactly what you asked for? Or not. I sat and read and read and then reread. This book is many books. Many lives. It's brave. Itâs brave to hope and talk about it. Whatâs important and not been said before in a book of poems? This. I think this is it.ââGabrielle Calvocoressi, author of Rocket FantasticPraise for River HouseâNo poet of her generation braids passion with intellect more impressively than Sally Keith. And in River House, Keith carries her talent to a whole new level. An elegy for the poetâs mother, River House is also an investigation of how we give our lives meaning and shape. At turns gorgeous, wry, and heartbreaking, these poems render the individual soul with a disarming immediacy. To read River House is to feel grief and bewilderment verging into sheer wonder.ââPeter Campion, author of Other PeopleâHeartbreaking and robust. [. . .] Sally Keithâs poems possess a quiet music, and their intricate scatters of thought bear witness to the intimate struggles of mourning.ââPublishers Weekly (starred review)âRiver because we are moving inexorably forward; house because we are locked forever to the past. Preternaturally calm even as they twist and turn against themselves, the sixty-three poems of River House feel as if theyâre happening in the time it takes to read them, except that when youâre finished with River House, your dream comes true: you can read the poems again. I do not know of a book of poems that embodies more heartbreakingly or more intelligently the experience of irreconcilable loss.ââJames Longenbach, author of foreverâExtraordinary [. . .] The poems focus the reader with a hunger so intelligent, so real, and so immediate, you forget youâre reading a poem. Itâs like looking at the moon while watching the stars disappear: donât you look harder? These poems are clear and strange. They illuminate without consolation. The world has ended many times in our contemporary literary landscape, but rarely has it started over with such agility, economy, and elegance.ââKatie Peterson, author of Fog and SmokeâHonest [. . .] Striking [. . .] Iâm mourning with the speaker, each poem somehow more shattering than the one previous.ââCoal Hill ReviewBiographical NoteSally Keith is the author of Two of Everything, as well as four previous collections of poetry, including River House and The Fact of the Matter. Recipient of a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship in 2016, she is a member of the MFA faculty at George Mason University and lives in Fairfax, Virginia.National media campaign, including TV, radio, and online interviewsNational print campaign, including reviews, features, and original essaysDigital galley campaign; digital galley available for download on EdelweissDigital ad campaign targeting top literary and poetry sites, including the Academy of American PoetryNewsletter promotion via the publisher to readers, sales and academic lists of more than 70K contactsComprehensive social media campaignAcademic outreach for course adoption