Middle-America's most engaging authors since 1998.
Walter Bargen has published 27 books of poetry including: My Other Mother’s Red Mercedes (Lamar University Press, 2018), Until Next Time (Singing Bone Press, 2019), Pole Dancing in the Night Club of God (Red Mountain Press, 2020), You Wounded Miracle, (Liliom Verlag, 2021), Too Late to Turn Back (Singing Bone Press, 2023), and Radiation Diary: Return to the Sea (Lamar University Press, 2023). He was appointed the first poet laureate of Missouri (2008-2009). His awards include: a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, Chester H. Jones Foundation Award, and the William Rockhill Nelson Award. He currently lives outside Ashland, Missouri, with his wife and too many formerly feral cats.
Published: 2024
In a distinguished, decades-long career as a poet, Bargen has turned to the atrocities of war as a subject on many occasions. None of his previous work, however, matches the power and haunting terrors of his new volume of verse about the Ukraine war with Russia. He writes with the knowledge, passion, and poetic skill of a literary artist at the peak of his powers.
~Larry D. Thomas, 2008 Texas Poet Laureate, Winner, 2023 Spur Award (poetry category) sponsored by Western Writers of America
Bargen strips totalitarian assertions to their lying bones in devastating poetic lines that illuminate the power-for-power’s sake of Putin’s war on Ukraine. Reading this collection of poems, one understands that the anadrome of “war” must be “raw.” His unrelenting vision of the seemingly irreversible decimation of all life in war will insinuate itself into the reader’s consciousness and conscience for a long time to come. Keep reading. Do not turn away in spite of the Thought Police that might be lurking in our margins.
~Julie Chappell, author of Mad Habits of a Life
It takes little imagination to understand the moral bankruptcy of Putin and the invasion of Ukraine. But it requires empathy and insight, discipline and the poet’s eye to present such a tragic subject and raise it to the level of language art. Bargen presents a fierce and exceptional witnessing that is true and resonant. This is what poetry at its best can do in the face of totalitarian inhumanity.
~Christopher Buckley, One Sky to the Next