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DAILY POEM

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  The Paris Review www.theparisreview.org Featured by Yahoo Up to $400 off selected luxury pet tech essentials at PetSnowy “missed signals,” Brenda Nasio Yahoo / Inbox Paris Review Poetry   www.theparisreview.org From: newsletter@theparisreview.org Unsubscribe To: quocoai_sontay@yahoo.com Fri, Apr 3 at 8:15 AM View this email in your browser Brenda Nasio missed signals         for barbara and bruce we went there mostly in spring to the house (which used to be a barn) with a garden outside and a free-standing tub upstairs past the three bedrooms (the last one was mine) the weather shifted in extremes and we adapted either sipping cups of tea wrapped in thick sweaters curled up on the rug or sunning ourselves on the lawn sipping bloody marys in our underwear (while bruce was in town) in the afternoon we would nap in rooms of antique jars and lamps and needlepointed chairs where the windows were sealed with plastic against flies and the wind stirred through pl...

Psalm 121

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  This Issue April 23, 2026 My Account Logout Site logo Politics Collapse Literature Collapse Arts Collapse Ideas Collapse Current Issue Current Issue More from the Review Events All Issues About Us Shop Literary Gifts Shop NYRB Classics Psalm 121 Timmy Straw a poem April 23, 2026 issue From the prohibition against representation     that binds the globe in images. From that blue sea from which like whips     my help will come to mend me nameless to this rock the world     that I may see you, my Lord. Who once misfit the eye     as mere prosperity, the glare that causes objects. Who once     set us in the deep a password, lock and mercenary. Who once     ranged in love, out there, the farthest animal of our personhood. But now the blackrobed brokerage of air is sawed     from under me. And now the gabled hospital I go is gated shut from me, ...

Lot’s Wife

Table of Contents - April 23, 2026 | The New York Review of Books I always get confused. I think it’s Lot’s turning back that turned her to salt. A whole pillar of it. I always think he’s an Orpheus of sorts, though Orpheus was gorgeous and a knockout on his lute. But Lot? There’s not a whole lot we can say in his favor. I have to think his wife had a name other than Lot’s wife, that she might have looked back to glimpse the life she had before him, before he offered her daughters to that mob, before what lay ahead— Lot himself with their daughters, Lot telling everyone how blameless he was. And her conversion? You can see why a woman might opt for what she did— a mineral goats or camels could lick, a stinging Lot could do nothing with. Visit us on Facebook! Opens External Webpage Visit us on Twitter! Opens External Webpage Visit us on Threads! Opens External Webpage Visit us on Bluesky! Opens External Webpage Copy share link Print page Andrea Cohen Andrea Cohen’s new book of poems,...