Member Reviews

Necessary Poisons is a playful experiment in collage, both visual and textual. The volume takes you into a dark, botanical world of carnivorous plants, women and witches. It’s an interesting piece of work bringing found poetry to a coherence I didn’t know it could have, as it spans a whole series of poems.

Thanks netgalley for the e-arc!

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The most important ingredient in writing, especially poetry, is passion, and this just didn't have it.

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This book combined my love for horror and poetry. This is the first found poetry collection I’ve read and I thoroughly enjoyed it. All of the poems were very cohesive and the graphics also helped convey the themes.

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As I read this collection of poems, I noticed that it didn't flow well. It felt like random sentences, and sometimes random words just put together with no real meaning. Then I got to the author's note at the end and realized that's exactly what this is.

This is just a bunch of seemingly random phrases put together and it reads exactly like that. No meaning, no feeling, nothing but words.

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This was an interesting narrative, it seemed to flow from a character resenting & questioning her role in the story to a woman reflecting on an abusive relationship to that woman breaking free and becoming dangerous herself. I quite liked some of the line from The Intention of Being, Never the Last Letter, A Wake, A Matter of Transition, The House of Interrogation and Sudden Botany. I also thought space was used in some of the poems - particularly Belatedly, The Refusal - well.

A solid collection, and a short read. Wasn't expecting to find out it was a found poetry collection from Stephen King's writing though, that revelation at the end surprised me (and possibly soured my opinion of the collection a little as I'm not much of a King fan).

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This collection just ended up being okay for me. At least it didn't take a lot of time to get through, but I didn't really end up taking anything away from it like I have with previous horror poetry collections I have read in the past.

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"Necessary Poisons" by Andrea Blythe is a sterling work of art. The only reason I give it three stars is because I have little appreciation and/or imagination for the abstract.

I appreciate receiving this ARC from Netgalley and I do highly recommend this book for anyone that is interested in abstract poetry and/or eco-poetry.

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Necessary Poisons is a delightfully eerie little book of found poetry, which uses words from a Stephen King book called The Plant.
As an amateur poet myself, I cannot help but to admire the dexterity with which the author has woven her found words together into a collection that tells a tale of a woman and her sense of self, all the while interweaving pieces that seem almost more suited to a fantasy novel.
It’s a little dark, bordering on disturbing at times, but all the while is still that one woman’s story, in all its fragments.
However, I must say that the style of poetry is not my favourite. I love the idea behind it, but I cannot help but prefer other styles, though this one has a particularly creative spark.
Altogether, this was a very quick read, but still left an impression upon me.

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This book was such a deep dive into the way phrases, imagery, duality, and the macabre all live within the authors mindset. All of the found poetry is arranged in a way that brings passion and intention to the forefront. The life springing forth from dark soil riddled with decay to help it grow. It’s as multifaceted as nature herself and I adore the interwoven motif of the manuscript and the ever lingering phantom of poisonous plants that thread throughout the poems. It just all comes together so well and I will definitely be revisiting this book!

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This is definitely an interesting and eerie poetry collection. It isn't precisely my kind of thing, but I can see it being really well appreciated by goth baddies.

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Throughout the book, I felt that the words in the poems didn't quite belong together, and after reading the author's note with the explanation of found poetry, I understand why. I think it would benefit the book, to have the author's note first, so that the reader will have the context for the poems flesh in mind.

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