Description
The Morrow Plots is a series of linked, research-based poems regarding the bloody history of, and varying identities of, The Morrow Plots, an experimental cornfield in Central Illinois that, in the 1920s, was a popular dumping ground for dead bodies, and is now a National Historical Landmark.
“These are poems placed in the Midwest for which the Midwest is less region than archetype. ‘At the edge of the interstate, / crows subvert the corn,’ Frank writes. ‘Strange how in the middle / of the farms, the convenience stores / still hide under bulletproof glass.’ Indeed, these well-crafted couplets and tercets do nothing to muffle the lethal tensions that rise out of the Morrow Plots, where ‘the hardest thing the Earth asks of us, /…requires not the tractor, but remembering.”
-from a review by Diane Seuss in Mid-American Review