Fire Season. By Jeff Knorr

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Fire Season is a collection of poems, both lyrics and prose poems that illustrate mass incarceration and the experience of having a family member incarcerated.  The poems build around the narrative of father and son sharing a very close bond and then being separated through incarceration. The poems explore the ways in which family members cope with the separation and isolation of having siblings, sons, daughters or parents locked up.  Some of the poems deal with the lives of many who have been incarcerated and have disappeared by the system through incarceration in exceedingly remote locations to lengthy solitary confinement without visitation. 

Issues include visiting, phone calls, care packages, and coping with stories shared by incarcerated families—while sharing stories of what’s happening inside prison creates connection, it is also difficult to hear and hold those stories.  It is in this way that the system promotes a violent setting inside, and the system is also violating family members through indirect violence against them. 

One of the main themes the collection raises is the absence, the disappearing, of loved ones as they are incarcerated and the disappearance of families to those who are incarcerated.  For families, it may occur because of the cost and distance needed to travel to visit or the cost of phone calls.  It can occur through a lack of forgiveness. It can occur through a lack of literacy and the ability to correspond via letters or e-mail.  What we know is that the disappearance of connection, the erosion of connection, leads to isolation, anxiety, depression, violence, and a continued prison cycle.

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Fire Season is a collection of poems, both lyrics and prose poems that illustrate mass incarceration and the experience of having a family member incarcerated.  The poems build around the narrative of father and son sharing a very close bond and then being separated through incarceration. The poems explore the ways in which family members cope with the separation and isolation of having siblings, sons, daughters or parents locked up.  Some of the poems deal with the lives of many who have been incarcerated and have disappeared by the system through incarceration in exceedingly remote locations to lengthy solitary confinement without visitation. 

Issues include visiting, phone calls, care packages, and coping with stories shared by incarcerated families—while sharing stories of what’s happening inside prison creates connection, it is also difficult to hear and hold those stories.  It is in this way that the system promotes a violent setting inside, and the system is also violating family members through indirect violence against them. 

One of the main themes the collection raises is the absence, the disappearing, of loved ones as they are incarcerated and the disappearance of families to those who are incarcerated.  For families, it may occur because of the cost and distance needed to travel to visit or the cost of phone calls.  It can occur through a lack of forgiveness. It can occur through a lack of literacy and the ability to correspond via letters or e-mail.  What we know is that the disappearance of connection, the erosion of connection, leads to isolation, anxiety, depression, violence, and a continued prison cycle.

Fire Season is a collection of poems, both lyrics and prose poems that illustrate mass incarceration and the experience of having a family member incarcerated.  The poems build around the narrative of father and son sharing a very close bond and then being separated through incarceration. The poems explore the ways in which family members cope with the separation and isolation of having siblings, sons, daughters or parents locked up.  Some of the poems deal with the lives of many who have been incarcerated and have disappeared by the system through incarceration in exceedingly remote locations to lengthy solitary confinement without visitation. 

Issues include visiting, phone calls, care packages, and coping with stories shared by incarcerated families—while sharing stories of what’s happening inside prison creates connection, it is also difficult to hear and hold those stories.  It is in this way that the system promotes a violent setting inside, and the system is also violating family members through indirect violence against them. 

One of the main themes the collection raises is the absence, the disappearing, of loved ones as they are incarcerated and the disappearance of families to those who are incarcerated.  For families, it may occur because of the cost and distance needed to travel to visit or the cost of phone calls.  It can occur through a lack of forgiveness. It can occur through a lack of literacy and the ability to correspond via letters or e-mail.  What we know is that the disappearance of connection, the erosion of connection, leads to isolation, anxiety, depression, violence, and a continued prison cycle.

Jeff Knorr is the author of five books of poetry, Fire Season (Flowersong Press), The Color of a New Country (Mammoth Books), The Third Body (Cherry Grove Collections), Keeper (Mammoth Books), and Standing Up to the Day (Pecan Grove Press).  His other works include Mooring Against the Tide: Writing Poetry and Fiction (Prentice Hall); the anthology, A Writer's Country (Prentice Hall); and The River Sings: An Introduction to Poetry (Prentice Hall).  His poetry and essays have appeared widely in literary journals and anthologies including Poetry Northwest, Atlanta Review, Chelsea, The Journal, North American Review, Red Rock Review, Barrow Street, and Like Thunder: Poets Respond to Violence in America.