Author of more than forty collections of poetry and prose, Wally Swist’s new books include Aperture (Kelsay Books), poems regarding caregiving his spouse through Alzheimer’s, and If You’re the Dreamer, I’m the Dream: Selected Translations from Rilke’s Book of Hours (Finishing Line Press).
Poems, essays, and translations have appeared in Anomaly, Chicago Quarterly Review, Commonweal, Healing Muse, Image Journal, Montreal Review, North American Review, Pensive, Poetry London, Rattle, and Your Impossible Voice.
Huang Po and the Dimensions of Love (Southern Illinois University Press, 2012) was selected by Yuseff Komunyakaa as co-winner of the 2011 Crab Orchard Open Poetry Competition. He was also the winner of the Ex Ophidia Press Poetry Prize in 2018 for A Bird Who Seems to Know Me.
Readings of Swist’s poems are archived on Garrison Keillor’s Writer’s Almanac and NPR.
Books of nonfiction include Singing for Nothing: Selected Nonfiction as Literary Memoir (Brooklyn, NY: The Operating System, 2018) and On Beauty: Essays, Reviews, Fiction, and Plays (New York & Lisbon: Adelaide Books, 2018).
Wild Rose Bush: The Life of Mary and Other Poems by Rainer Maria Rilke was selected as an honorable mention in the 2025 Stephen Mitchell Prize for Excellence in Translation sponsored by Green Linden Press.
Bainbridge Island Press published his most recent collection of his poetry, Discovering What to Say (2025).
This gem of a book is replete with angelic sightings and soundings. Wally Swist’s perceptive and lyrical phrasing allows these poems to shine with vision and insight – at times in puzzlement and surprise, at other times, comfort and contemplation. Personal angelic encounters mix with angels of particular place and period; additionally Swist’s poetic voice generously hosts translated work by poets such as Hesse, Lorca, and especially Rilke. Throughout, angels serve as touchstones for our human experiences: ‘angels are the enablers’ of spiritual and creative flourishing (‘of angels’), and as readers, we come to understand how an angel’s ‘light within/ also rises inside you’ (‘Baccarat Angel’).
–Sarah Law, Editor of The Amethyst Review (U.K.), and the author of the historical novel Sketches from Heaven, a 2023 Illuminations Silver Medal Award winner.
The image that leaps out to me on reading Wally Swist’s Of Angels: Poems & Translations is that of an angel “gliding into a seam of the air.” These poems and translations render angelic manifestation as something that close—not merely a sacred symbol, but a living point of communion and revelation. Through a range of voices, languages, and registers, we listen for those moments of transmission and transfixion that become for author and reader alike “touchstones to our better, or best, selves.”
–Michael Centore, Editor, Today’s American Catholic



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