Ginger Graziano, originally from New York City, lives in Asheville, North Carolina, where the mountains inspire peace and creativity. Her poems have been published in The American Journal of Poetry, Kakalak, Sky Island Journal, The Great Smokies Review, and Front Porch Review among others. Her memoir, See, There He Is, is available through Amazon or www.gingergraziano.com/writing. Instagram: gingergraziano
PRAISE:
What a beautiful, heart breaking, heart healing collection this is. Beginning with a devastating sequence that re-lives the loss of her son to cancer, Graziano then describes her life “Before” and “After” his death in narratives that trace her literal journey from her native New York to her “new native land” of western North Carolina. And her emotional journey from searing grief to hard won joy and love. These vivid and powerful poems will compel your attention and your empathy.
–Eric Nelson, author of Horse Not Zebra and Some Wonder
“Hold out the fired bowl of your heart,” Ginger Graziano urges, in What I Didn’t Give to Goodwill. That hard-earned gesture of hope is borne through poems of grief, legacy, and resilience in this strong, three-part collection. Graziano relates the suffering of her son, dying from brain cancer, the strength she secured from a proud, Italian immigrant family, and her renewal of spirit claimed in gardening, a move to a new state, and a necessary balance of society and solitude. The memory of her son powers her determination: “[W]hen moths chew holes in his jackets, / I will see light through the broken threads.” Read these fine poems for their discerning light.
–Kenneth Chamlee, author of The Best Material for the Artist in the World
At a Goodwill Store, you may find a football jacket with gold leather sleeves. But you can’t find the boy who wore it. With fervent angst, Ginger Graziano recounts the loss of her son to a brain tumor and of the things she must keep in her heart. Her poems let us into the last car rides and afternoons with her son, and how she still wears “his old shirt, sleeves rolled up.” She roams through memory into her early life, her intractable family, and after leaving home, her finding renewal. The poems, both resonant and alluring, capture the deep source of what makes life memorial: her profound empathy for the mysteries of this world.
–Bruce P. Spang, Author of Twist, Warren Publisher, 2025



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