“‘My Bishop,’ the central poem in this fine new collection by Michael Collier, once again displays his cool intellect and exquisite facility of language, knife-sharp humor and resilient humanity. What sets it aside as a masterpiece, his masterpiece, is how with equal parts unearthly grace and lit gas-jet fury he breaks our hearts.”
— Helen Schulman, author of Come with Me: A Novel
“You might think of this as a time that privileges politics over poetry if you want to make a political difference. Michael Collier’s My Bishop and Other Poems reminds us of the power of the observant in an age when, too often, we move too quickly to notice the world unfolding around us. These poems bring a passion, an empathy, and a way of seeing I had forgotten was possible.”
— A. Van Jordan, author of The Cineaste: Poems
“Michael Collier’s My Bishop and Other Poems offers a nuanced foray into what it means to attempt, in language, to recount personal memories and to establish what broader authenticity and significance they might reveal. . . . Collier reminds us again and again that there is in poetry a political place for the genuine—that is, for the closely attended-to, paradoxical full menu of experience that, once in a while, yields up, however ephemerally, a sense of something akin to what might be called a truth.”
— Lisa Russ Spaar, On the Seawall
“There is something about his affections that keeps us awakened, vigilant. . . . A poet troubled and charming, struggling with turmoil in the animating surfaces and turns of his poems. . . . Sublime.”
— American Poetry Review
“I’m already a Collier fan, and this book, over the others, is my dramatic favorite. The risk-taking is new, or at least riskier, clean, and profound—stories unlimited in freedom. . . . I’m glad I had to wait three hours in the doctor’s office so I could immerse myself into Collier’s mysterious processes.”
— Grace Cavalieri, Washington Independent Review of Books
"Collier’s style may hinge on his descriptive mode, but description by no means defines it. He is willing to take these poems where they need to go to establish a rich relationship for readers between not simply what the poet sees and how he sees it, but between the reader and the poet himself. All of this requires, not surprisingly, numerous techniques and approaches – a diversity over which, thankfully for us, Collier is in firm command."
— Literary Matters