Review STEP LIGHTLY by Donna Wolf-Palacio is a book filled with questions that are nearly impossible to answer, but this poet never stops asking, “So who is who and what is what?” She also never stops pounding “the stone floor” for answers. These are gorgeous poems. They are also complicated poems because life is very complicated. Political concerns are addressed subtly, almost slyly, interwoven into lyric poems, but with warning and, at times, dark humor. Throughout the book, Wolf-Palacio uses stunning and moving imagery and language. “If the world shatters will you pick me up and hold me to your ear?” In the end, what matters is the matter of being alive, the matter of time, space, relying on what we see and cannot see, and alterations of self and body. “Though it is hard to accept the collapse of the body,” Wolf-Palacio returns, again and again, to a deep tenderness: “Pretend I’m lifting you to pick an apple off a tree you can’t see. /You take my word for it, and the apple appears.” I could not put this book down.–Amy Small-McKinney, Winner of the 2016 Kithara Book Prize The Chinese poets of centuries past would have admired Donna Wolf-Palacio’s poems. I, too, have been under the spell of the wisdom and compassion of her poetry for many years. The poems of Step Lightly search for clues and artifacts and find, in an edgy world, a smoothing and comforting like the raking of a Zen garden. I recommend reading Beirut and Vermont back-to-back. Here we are given entrances to her world, that becomes ours. Where else can we rest? she asks. Here, Donna Wolf-Palacio, we can rest here I trust, safely, with an understanding of the beauty of the world and what the purpose of Beauty is. This is brilliant poetry.–Leonard Gontarek, author “The paintings of the virgins are like unopened pecans.” Donna Wolf-Palacio’s language is deceptively simple. Before we know it we find ourselves in the presence of the largest cosmic questions, unfolding in ordinary life, plain as pecans. “Who is who and what” is what asks one poem, and like the Chinese poets she occasionally pays homage to, she brings the world to us in a nutshell, intimate, unpretentious, wondrous. “Better to believe in something you can spare” is her tender warning to us, and these poems don’t shy away from the dark, nor the humor we can’t spare. To take these poems in your hand is like holding a tree branch that’s in bud—you can’t look away from the astonishment.–Catherine Bancroft About the Author Donna Wolf-Palacio's books of poetry, What I Don't Know and The Other Side were published by Finishing Line Press. She received an MFA in Poetry from Columbia University's School of the Arts. She has published in Poetry, The Pennsylvania Gazette, Voices, The Musehouse Journal, Intro, The Interpreter, and Writing from the Heart: Poems about Adoption. She wrote a collection of versions of Chinese poems, "The Heart of the Dragon". She has taught a poetry workshop at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia and was editor/consultant for the UARTS Poetry Review. She has done many readings and workshops in New York and Philadelphia. She has received grants and fellowships from The Leeway Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the University of Pennsylvania, Columbia University, New York University, Bryn Mawr College, the Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia, the Postgraduate Institute of New York, and the Pennsylvania Council of the Arts. She is a psychotherapist who lives in Philadelphia with her husband and daughter.