Winner of the 2020 Paraclete Poetry Prize, 
Litany of Flights is a luminous examination of the journey of the soul, from moments of loss to moments of incandescent transformation. These poems remind us to behold the extraordinary in the ordinary, and that the secret workings of the divine occur even through the difficult: "the painful paring of your hollow bones has made you light." Drawing on the beauty of the natural world, the devastating effects of drought and wildfires, tender moments of daily experience, and lessons of the saints, the poet creates a landscape of light and darkness, with unexpected turns into divine presence and absence. Through a spiral of red-tailed hawks, the nest of a mourning dove, the parting of waters, and the ripeness of a persimmon, this shimmering collection invites the reader to singular and transfiguring flight. 
Litany of Flights  (from the forthcoming collection) 
 First, the winged movement, steady, forward. Scrub jays in flitting 
 progress, hawks in predator glide, a ringing up, a knife-sharp slope 
 down. Second, the effortless type, wind-splayed, motionless pinions 
 in thermal recline, as the Psalmist says, blessings breeze his love even 
 in sleep. Third, the hungry, against the gale, the destination singular 
 and the sun dipping crimson. Fourth, the metallic, business or pleasure. 
 Fifth, the whirring kind, all hummingbird. A picnic, apples and chocolate 
 in the garden with roses, both flower and child. You miss it when it's gone. 
 Sixth, a baffling flight of stairs, winding upward, passage and yet vehicle, 
 spiraling to unseen landings--hope courses in the kaleidoscopic lights. 
 Seventh, soar to the sun. Eighth, melt in bitter hubris. You know the story. 
 Ninth, escape. A flight out of Egypt, a path through the sea cleared by 
 divine hand. The times you ran, the times you were left behind in lament. 
 Tenth, only rotting in the belly of a whale tames your stubborn turn from 
 Nineveh. Eleventh, flights of despair and of yearning, two sides of one 
 letting go, hard-earned release back into the wild, unbound by expectation, 
 featherlike. Twelfth, in a moment, caught up high by the Beloved, the one 
 making all things work together, wings, body, arch, air--caught up, like the 
 Shulamite bride, to regions beyond aeronautical wisdom, transported in joy. 
 See, he says, the painful paring of your hollow bones has made you light.