0
Skip to Content
Hailey Spencer Writes
About
Books
Publications
Shop
Contact
Hailey Spencer Writes
About
Books
Publications
Shop
Contact
About
Books
Publications
Shop
Contact
Shop Out of Love in Spring
Spencer_Hailey_COV1.jpg Image 1 of
Spencer_Hailey_COV1.jpg
Spencer_Hailey_COV1.jpg

Out of Love in Spring

$13.00

Out of Love in Spring is a strange little book about love, loss, and the changing of the seasons. This collection walks us through a journey of falling in love before you’re ready, and falling out of love exactly when you’re meant to. From pantoums on killing birds to job applications about the loss of identity after a breakup, this collection will surprise and delight at every turn.

“I often worry that I am unable to tell the difference between the brilliant and the abysmal in poetry. Then I see something like this and it reassures me that I can tell when something is good.”

–Catherine Potter, editor, Red Ogre Review

 

Quantity:
Add To Cart

Out of Love in Spring is a strange little book about love, loss, and the changing of the seasons. This collection walks us through a journey of falling in love before you’re ready, and falling out of love exactly when you’re meant to. From pantoums on killing birds to job applications about the loss of identity after a breakup, this collection will surprise and delight at every turn.

“I often worry that I am unable to tell the difference between the brilliant and the abysmal in poetry. Then I see something like this and it reassures me that I can tell when something is good.”

–Catherine Potter, editor, Red Ogre Review

 

Out of Love in Spring is a strange little book about love, loss, and the changing of the seasons. This collection walks us through a journey of falling in love before you’re ready, and falling out of love exactly when you’re meant to. From pantoums on killing birds to job applications about the loss of identity after a breakup, this collection will surprise and delight at every turn.

“I often worry that I am unable to tell the difference between the brilliant and the abysmal in poetry. Then I see something like this and it reassures me that I can tell when something is good.”

–Catherine Potter, editor, Red Ogre Review