Advance praise…

For PULSE

JOY CASTRO

Luscious psalms to divine recklessness, the poems in Maria Nazos's PULSE wear their formal brilliance lightly, leaping and pirouetting with raw, gritty grace and a clear-eyed love of our human brokenness, from which they never flinch. A marvel.

–Author of One Brilliant Flame, Flight Risk, and Island of Bones

SADDIQ DZUGOZI

Maria Nazos in PULSE has written for the world a seismic, incandescent tribute to life. It is devotional with a ferocious tenderness. Here is a poet who can and has resurrected ghosts in our veins—the parents destined to drown in quiet despair, and the lovers who linger like bruises. This collection doesn’t flinch from darkness or the suffocating weight of grief. Yet Nazos transforms pain into a strange, stubborn grace. From the cliffs of Delphi to the cornfields of Nebraska, she maps a world where history bleeds into the present. Her voice is both elegy and rebellion, hymn and rhyme. To read PULSE is to touch the “dirty human sweetness” of existence itself: flawed, forgiving, and furiously alive.

–Author of Your Crib, My Qibla and Bakandamiya: An Elegy

KATE GALE

Sometimes poetry trills, tramples, thrupples backward into the time when we didn’t know who we were. These poems are like that. When the vine breathing above our head doesn’t mean to strangle us, and the man looming over us doesn’t doom us to strangulation either, but all the while, our voicebox becomes our own: PULSE refuses to sorrow deep and instead blooms and plunges into wonder up where the air grows thin. Up here, we hear a woman singing.

–PhD, Publisher, Red Hen Press, author of Under a Neon Sun, Swimming the Milky Way, and The Loneliest Girl

DAVID KOEHN 

In PULSE, Maria Nazos builds a lyric terrain where myth kisses motel neon, and every love song is underscored by rupture. Nazos moves effortlessly between forms—not as ornament but as necessity, language singing and stinging at once.

In poems like “I Go Back to Mykonos, 1976” and “We Bury a Gecko at Three A.M.,” love and grief arrive in unexpected guises. She writes of a lover “sticky as rock candy after his work,” of empty bottles that “chimed into the recycling bin like a vagrant’s morning anthem,” and of “glittering anemones that light up the bedroom windows” with what we carry and can’t say.

Nazos is a conjurer of contradictions: she can thread tenderness through a battlefield, find divinity in a slumlord, or resurrect the dead with nothing more than a waitress’s bruise or a bar’s closing time. Her speakers wear sequined tops and scar tissue, confess across languages and continents, and refuse to be reduced by trauma or desire.

What Nazos offers isn’t just poetry—it’s company. These poems walk with you, steady and immediate, whispering that even the broken things still pulse with light. This is a book that stays with you, like the scent of salt in your hair after the sea, the cigarette after sex, both lovely and, perhaps, ill-gotten. These poems are the voice in the dark saying: I see you. I’ve been there too. Poems like “Ars Poetica,” “I Go Back to Mykonos, 1976,” and “The Ghost’s Wife Speaks” showcase a voice both unflinching and lush—a poetics of surviving beautifully, not cleanly. 

Like a disco ball above a war zone, PULSE pulses with why poetry matters, with grit and glitter. These poems remember what it’s like to be wild and breakable, to be held and to vanish, to run toward danger just to feel the wind. They don’t flinch—from longing, from the shattered, from desire, from the messy afterglow of all of it, the “gold in the olive oil.”

–Author of Sur, Scatterplot, and Twine

Reviews & press for The Slow Horizon That Breathes

Selected poems, translations, essays, & interviews

Poems

“The Hollywood Glacier,” Palette Poetry

“My Cousin and Marilyn,” “Vision Quest,” and “Imagine Me as Smoke,” The Stone Poetry Journal

“Waitress in a Small-Town Seaside Tavern,” The Other Pages National Poetry Month Podcast

“The Statue of Liberty Walks into a Bar,” SWWIM

“On the Beach in Rosarito, Tijuana” and “Ping-Pong Show,” Voice Lux Journal

“Asshole,” Birmingham Poetry Review

“Waitress in a Small-Town Seaside Tavern,” TriQuarterly

“What Forever Means,” New Ohio Review

“After Hours,” New Ohio Review

“Cape Cod Pantoum,” The New Yorker

“Cash Register Sings the Blues,” American Life in Poetry

“Bungee Jumping,” TriQuarterly

“Before a Man in the Midwest Loses a Lover,” The Fourth River

“Down to Earth,” decomP

“Ars Poetica,” Tupelo Quarterly

 “Still Life,” The Atticus Review

 “Love Poem to a Tree,” from the anthology Double Lives, Reinventing Ourselves, and Those We Leave Behind, by Wising Up Press

“Wild, Wild Horses,” The Boxcar Poetry Review

Translations

“Causa Artis 3,” by Dimitra Kotoula, trans. by Maria Nazos, World Literature Today

“Prayer (Or, The Apple)” by Dimitra Kotoula, trans. by Maria Nazos, The Puritan Magazine

"Moods XV" and "Erotikon I" by Dimitra Kotoula, trans. by Maria Nazos, New Poetry in Translation

“Case Study V (on Ethics)” by Dimitra Kotoula, trans. by Maria Nazos, Blue Lyra Review

“Moods X,” “All to the House of Israel,” and “The Body of Dead Christ in the Tomb” by Dimitra Kotoula, trans. By Maria Nazos, Drunken Boat

Essays & reviews

A Review of Bone Fragments by Rick Christiansen, North American Review: Open Space

“Tips for Handling the Rejection Letter,” North American Review

Tuesdays with Ted Kooser,” North American Review

Elegies, Activism, and Aubades: A Review of Martín Espada, Floaters, Massachusetts Review

For They Become the River: A Review of Martín Espada’s Vivas to Those Who Have Failed,” Massachusetts Review

Translator’s Note on Dimitra Kotoula, Anomaly

“Looking Inward and Outward: Lenora Castillo’s poems’ La Nebraska’ and ‘The Migrant Workers Are Back,’” Poetry from the Plains

Interviews

Five Questions for Maria Nazos, Copper Nickel

Hellenic Radio Podcast

The Parrot Literary Corner, “The Poetic World of Maria Nazos”

Pandemic poetry: Poets use online video to share their art

Interview in Kearney Hub, "Poet Maria Nazos to Read Her Work at Frank House"  

Interview in hocTok, "Laugh, Laughter, & Poetry"

Omaha World-Herald article with intro by Ted Kooser

Interview in The Daily Nebraskan, "UNL Doctoral Candidate's Poem Published in The New Yorker" 

Daily Nebraskan: "Nasty Women" Poetry Reading Inspired by 2016 Election

Interview with The Lincoln Arts Council

Media Release from City of Lincoln Mayor's Office

University of Nebraska Newsletter

Interview with "Positivity Matters" on KZUM 89.3 FM

Interview with "The Poets' Corner" on Provincetown's WOMR radio

Review of A Hymn That Meanders in The Barnstable Patriot