Like a man who might go fishing as a diversion only to catch something extraordinary, maybe Gary L. McDowell didn't set out to write a big fat hymn to the human condition. But he did. The brilliant American Amen wrestles, body and spirit, with our belligerent world. It's a tensile poetic line McDowell casts, in the many senses of the word: this poetry throws, sheds, exhales, reckons, sows, shapes, bestows. Part gristle, part faith, American Amen is a beautiful book, reeling in something baffling about adulthood as it glints and flexes, alive, into the air. - Amy Newman Gary L. McDowell's poems shimmer with masterful variety-long sinuous sequences and short intensifying lyrics; personal narratives and prayers to steel, wheat, and corn; family poems, of a father and of a son, yet poems capable of rich otherness: I found my history in the tiny / bones of a hummingbird. For all this productive range, the center of McDowell's impressive first book, American Amen, is love, whose abiding act is acceptance. That's what the word amen means-whether in Jewish, Muslim, or Christian usage-and that's the deepest gift among the many gifts of these poems. As he writes himself, out of loss and gain, out of terror and awe, after all, in case of fire, any god will do. - David Baker In this age of new-didacticism a reader of poetry might sometimes wish to ask poetry to delight first, then worry about instructing. Gary L. McDowell's American Amen does just that, line by gravid line, one dazzling moment after another, in poems that are wholly true. A romance of place and person continually undergoes scrutiny and comes out from disillusionment to wonder, manifold mysteries, and joy-honest, stunned, self-forgetful glimpses of the illimitable. An unsettling yet steadfast vision obtains, of origin, longing, creation, and departure-all revealed as inevitable yet unpredictable forces of grace. This is an astonishing collection, a poetry of resoundingly human and natural marvels. - Willial6