In Energy Corridor, Houston, Texas is the macabre avatar for a nation that has systematically stripped political and economic power from the middle and lower classes. In these poems
the speaker wrestles with the guilt and complacency of living in the world’s wealthiest nation. It is easy in America to do nothing and suckle the trickling down of the rich, but these poem
urge we have a community responsibility to alter the way we act. Through varied lenses, from Jean-jacques Rosseau toThe Texas Chain Saw Massacre, from Goethe to contemporary
electronic, from the 1982 Tylenol Murders to the Stanley Cup, these poems assemble the rhetoric of our cultural landscape into a call to arms. We must change our ways.