Edited by Steven Long
Introduction by Sherri Mitchell Weh’na Ha’mu Kwasset
softcover 978-1-961905-03-0
e-book 978-1-961905-02-3
December 2023 | 208 pages
2024 Maine Literary Awards Finalist
Embark on a literary journey along Maine’s Penobscot River with Rivers of Ink: Literary Reflections on the Penobscot. Curated with care and profound insight, this anthology opens with an introduction by Sherri Mitchell Weh’na Ha’mu Kwasset, a respected Indigenous attorney, activist, and author from the Penobscot Nation. Through its pages, Rivers of Ink offers a mosaic of voices from 61 Maine writers, each weaving a tale of the river’s indelible mark on the region’s history, culture, and daily life.
Your purchase of Rivers of Ink supports the Friends of Katahdin Woods & Waters’ campaign “A Monumental Welcome.” Proceeds will fund a new visitor contact station, priority park projects, and Wabanaki-directed initiatives, ensuring the preservation and appreciation of this magnificent natural heritage for generations to come.
“Striking images of flora and fauna and of landscapes and wilderness are among the many pleasures of reading Rivers of Ink: ‘cormorants riding/the eddies/my kin/singing rock me/on the water’ (lisa panepinto). Thomas, a painter, makes his home an ‘overcrowded shrine to the river’ (J.D. Mankowski). A mother scatters her son’s ashes in the Penobscot, ‘A ceaseless, flowing movement—like music—constantly evolving, carrying us and our stories, our cultures’ (Annaliese Jakimides). The poems and prose in this book are a moving tribute to the removal of the dam, to the cleanup of the river, to the return of Atlantic salmon and other fish to its waters, to the redemptive rewilding of the Penobscot River: ‘Wilderness enters our lives and we find/ a way to greet it’ (Kathleen Ellis).”
—Alice Bolstridge, PhD, author of Oppression for the Heaven of It, a fictionalized memoir, and Chance & Choice, a chapbook of poems
“What a testament this anthology is to the majesty and importance of the Penobscot River. The tenderness, reverence, and respect each writer has for the mighty watershed make for a deeply moving and inspiring collection. Reading Rivers of Ink was an experience in gratitude: I am grateful to live on the shore of the Penobscot; I am grateful for this community of talented writers; I am grateful for the dazzling celebration between these covers—a treasure, polished smooth as a river stone, on every page.”
—Hollie Adams, author of Things You’ve Inherited from Your Mother
“Brimming with voices as diverse as the river’s currents and the land through which it flows, Rivers of Ink is a significant addition to the literature of the Penobscot. Readers both familiar and unfamiliar with the river itself will return to these pages.”
—Kristen Britain, New York Times bestselling author of the Green Rider fantasy series
“To the river writers in this anthology, thank you for your marvelous visions of the Penobscot. Ecological and animated, meditative, and hopeful, vital, tender, and welcoming: your poems, stories, and essays capture the spirit of this mighty thoroughfare. We came away feeling new awe and appreciation for that river that runs through all of us, sustaining and alive.”
—Carl and David Little, authors of Art of Penobscot Bay
“The writers in Rivers of Ink speak to us about the power of place, how one river connects us all. It is as if writers and readers alike are on the banks of the Penobscot together, taking the time to look closely, learn from the past, and look toward the future. Each story, each poem becomes part of the flow in this river of words, and we travel through geologic time, Indigenous time, and industrial time, to a time that—we hope—will be one of renewal.”
—Stuart Kestenbaum, former poet laureate of Maine and author of six collections of poetry