White Summer, the first collection from poet Joelle Biele, is a book full of gorgeous language, delicate yet enduring imagery, and a quiet lyric intensity that is far too rare in contemporary poetry. No life detail—a fly, a group of starlings, a festival of dolls—escapes Biele’s notice, and we are better for having seen the world through her eyes. Biele’s poems, which range from short lyrics to longer meditations, are startling in their clarity, precise in their diction, and deft in their craft. There’s a fiercely active imagination on display in White Summer, and a reader cannot help but surrender to these portraits of abundance and beauty. This book is alive in the world, not just merely of it.”—Allison Joseph, author of In Every Seam and Soul Train
“In White Summer, Joelle Biele exhibits a Roethke-like affinity with nature and nature’s creatures. At times a miniaturist, Biele constructs exquisite addresses to a heron, cicada, spider, catalpa tree, mockingbird, snail, cormorant, and others. These pitch-perfect poems are written with a delicate, meticulous attention to craft and music. Like the joy she takes in her subjects, this collection is a joy to read.”
—Elizabeth Spires, author of Worldling
“Joelle Biele writes that ‘Some stories will never leave you alone.’ Yet White Summer is blessed rather than obsessed with its stories. The writing itself, for one thing, is so effortlessly achieved, so richly sustained, and so inevitably resolved. Biele fills her poems, she doesn’t burden them, even as she lives in two worlds at once: nature and the present; family and the past—one of which is home, the other exile.”—Stanley Plumly, author of Now That My Father Lies Down Beside Me: New Selected Poems, 1970–2000
“The ‘sprung rhythms’ of Gerard Manley Hopkins are ghost-glimmerings that spark White Summer’s finely glossed, soul-breathy, delectably lyrical poems, in which Joelle Biele brilliantly explores the fundamental knowing of the Immanence of Nature, and beyond—a bravo debut.”—Wanda Coleman, 2001 National Book Award nominee for Mercurochrome: New Poems