In Junk Drawer, Corey D. Cook brings the poet’s eye and sensibilities to artifacts and occasions both common and uncommon, such as a fishing trip, a mother’s grief, the Donald Hall estate sale, a splitting wedge and the drawer filled with the detritus of accumulated living: “His and hers phone chargers / in an inexplicable knot, / bound together / like a solemn vow.” Through the perceptive lens of Cook’s poetry, his gift for metaphor, we are able to say with new and deeper understanding: I know where we are, I have been here before.
–Robert Demaree, author of Other Ladders and After Labor Day
In Junk Drawer, Corey D. Cook brings the poet’s eye and sensibilities to artifacts and occasions both common and uncommon, such as a fishing trip, a mother’s grief, the Donald Hall estate sale, a splitting wedge and the drawer filled with the detritus of accumulated living: “His and hers phone chargers / in an inexplicable knot, / bound together / like a solemn vow.” Through the perceptive lens of Cook’s poetry, his gift for metaphor, we are able to say with new and deeper understanding: I know where we are, I have been here before.
–Robert Demaree, author of Other Ladders and After Labor Day