ReviewI adore this book!! I feel like I'm swimming as I'm reading! Laurel Blossom catches with lyric clarity the feel of swimming, the allure and faith in the water's elegant wit and power that we learned from Esther Williams. Un- is a gift: no other poetry has so captured the magic of swimming, the body's favorite dance floor!!--Jill Schary Robinson, author of PerdidoImagine a Hollywood mystery written by a feminist Raymond Chandler, and you'll be close to the spirit of this astonishingly original book of poems. Un- is a classic who-done-it, in which the reader is confronted with missing persons, misidentified characters, friends named after movie stars, and movie stars who are both more and less than they appear to be. Like all good mysteries, Un-is also a love story, though in this case the romance is with water. Understudies, missed connections, and missed opportunities percolate through the watery lens of the book's ubiquitous swimming pools, whose buoyancy and transparency is juxtaposed with water's ability to dissolve and erase. Women bear the brunt of this undoing: Un-, as in unappreciated, uncredited, unknown, and unnamed. I dare anyone to find more excitement, mystery, intelligence, and shear bravado wrapped in such an elegant package.--Gary Young, author of That's What and Even So: New and Selected PoemsA mystery charges the center of Laurel Blossom's superb Un-. The object of the poet's acute attention is a Mrs. Godfrey, understudy to Esther Williams, Hollywood's mid-century swim goddess. And the "un" of Un- is "uncredited"--which is an injustice, maybe, in Hollywood, but Blossom also explores the ways in which it can be a blessing to be able to remake oneself anonymously, without the burden of a "name." Another "un" here is the poet's project to un-erase the past, access it, and feed her hunger for stories that have glancing, enigmatic connections with her own. But her discoveries are tentative, because no one, including the poet herself, exactly tells the truth in this story: truth is as changeable as the fluid that was Williams's element, and the poet makes up delightful, often hilarious, stuff with great รฉlan. Blossom deploys all the attributes of a great detective--imagination, perseverance, and guile--because she understands that when we choose certain people as objects of devotion and curiosity, the genius and vertรบ of those people (as Machiavelli used the word, to mean excellence, honor, and power), even far away in space and time, can be life-changing or even life-saving. So it is with this marvelous book.--Patrick Donnelly, author of Little-Known Operas, Nocturnes of the Brothel of Ruin, and The ChargeAbout the AuthorLAUREL BLOSSOM is the author of two book-length narrative prose poems, Degrees of Latitude and Longevity, both from Four Way Books. Previous books of lyric poetry include Wednesday: New and Selected Poems, The Papers Said, What's Wrong, and a previous chapbook, Any Minute. Her work has appeared in a number of anthologies and in many national, international, and online journals. Her poetry has been nominated for both the Pushcart Prize and the Elliston Prize. She has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Ohio Arts Council, the New York State Council on the Arts, and Harris Manchester College, Oxford University. Blossom is the editor of Splash! Great Writing About Swimming. She served as the first ever Poet Laureate of Edgefield, South Carolina (2015-17). She currently lives in Los Angeles.