Description
Description
In Mermaids of Albuquerque, Cohen leaps off a trope of geological time, a past sea in the basin of Albuquerque, and finds there a fresh trough of poetry. These poems come to us flush with magic, with an imagined past, and a love for the city of her origin.
Reading Mermaids of Albuquerque feels like stumbling upon a Chachalaca three hundred miles north of its usual range-a magical and unexpected treat. Cohen's world, though familiar, is seen through a lens that makes everything just a little different, odder, brighter, bolder, and further afield, allowing us to see the world with marveling eyes.
In Mermaids of Albuquerque, Cohen's poetry celebrates the ordinary, a testament to her joy in the natural and human landscapes of New Mexico. Her joyful and richly grounded poems capture the essence of birds, flowers, and the 'Land of Enchantment, ' turning them into 'diamonds of shiny, invincible sand.'
Through nuanced figurative turns, Cohen transforms her connection to the natural world into profound observations about the complexity of human nature. Morning glories become "beautiful love letters," leading the poet to meditate on loss and resilience, highlighting how nature continues its beauty despite human violence. Yet, her poetry's subtext of joy transcends any hint of bleakness. In every poem, we sense Cohen's genuine joy for nature and wildlife-the Chachalaca's "raucous" song, dancing honey bees, the Albuquerque desert, and mourning doves. These elements congregate in her pages to remind us that "the world is just dying to do better than yesterday."
Elizabeth Cohen's Mermaids of Albuquerque invites you to build an altar to all things ending and beginning again. Read these poems and experience a journey where joy and profound observation intertwine beautifully.
Critical Reviews
Critical Reviews
Elizabeth's poems, her fresh, bold and original voice and evocative imagery, along with her tenderness, allowed me to travel with her to many lands. In the end, Mermaids of Albuquerque transformed me into another version of myself, my heart, a wildflower.
- Amirah Al Wassif, How to Bury a Curious Girl
The world in these poems is the world we all live in but just a little different, just a little odder or brighter or bolder or further afield. I love a book that helps me see the world with marveling eyes.
- Camille T. Dungy, Soil: The Story of a Black Mother's Garden
Elizabeth Cohen makes the natural and human landscapes of New Mexico her own in these joyful, richly grounded poems. It feels right that a poet of delight in the ordinary-birds and flowers, "diamonds of shiny, invincible sand"-should spring from the 'Land of Enchantment.'
- Campbell McGrath, Nouns and Verbs
In every poem, we can sense Cohen's genuine joy for nature and wildlife, for the Chachalaca's "raucous" song and the dancing honey bees, for the Albuquerque desert, and mourning doves, all congregating to remind us that "the world is just dying / to do better than yesterday." Read these poems, for they "build an altar / to all things ending, and all things / beginning again."
- Octavio Quintanilla, The Book of Wounded Sparrows
Publishing Information
Publishing Information

The Allstora Membership
Membership Perks:
- Save 30% on all online store purchases
- Exclusive access to author's content
- You pay less, but authors still earn double
Membership Terms:
- To access membership discount simply log in and add to cart, discount applied automatically.
- One month free trial, cancel anytime. Membership renews on the 15th of each month.
