Creekwater Mansions
by Ian Hall
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Pub Date Apr 16 2026 | Archive Date Apr 21 2026
EastOver Press | Independent Book Publishers Association (IBPA), Members' Titles
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Description
Creekwater Mansions documents the intimacy of duress. A son puffs cigarette smoke down his grandad’s throat because the old man is too feeble to draw breath; retired draft horses learn to dance; the land manager’s hired muscle flaunts an axe-handle; a grieving family uses a coffin as a card table; schoolboys siphon gin out of shag carpet just to catch a high. These are love poems—unsparing and spun of daily life in Eastern Kentucky.
Advance Praise
“There is no one else rendering poetry like Ian Hall. His poems are gnarly gardens of deep appreciation of what this tangled, earthly world offers. Nouns often set loose in verbiage. And verbs set down roots in the lush soil of memory. I consider most of Hall’s poems as praise poems, praise for this story we have found ourselves in, generations after a story was passed down of first man and first woman thrust from a garden for being hungry and curious. We are in it now, and Hall’s potent poems illuminate the unsung details of a family, a community striving to live where to make a life is impossible.”
— Joy Harjo, 23rd U.S. Poet Laureate
“All too often, the contemporary poetry that gets most lauded is little more than chopped-up prose with the right attitudes, so reading Ian Hall's poems is a much-needed reminder of how the best poetry does so much more. The poems in Creekwater Mansions are big-hearted but never sentimental, always true to their time and place. Nevertheless, what I admire most is the sheer *aliveness* of the language, the unanticipated words or similes that reward multiple readings. I doubt a better debut book of poetry will be published this year.”
— Ron Rash, author of Serena and The Risen
“Creekwater Mansions is wry and wise and smart-as-hell. If Tyler Childers could have studied under Robert Penn Warren, if James Still could have fallen in love with Nick Offerman, then maybe someone else could have written this book. As it stands, only the erudite mud dauber Ian Hall could have given us a debut so masculo-mythic, it ruins grit lit. Hear ye, hear ye: Hall is an indispensable new writer of Appalachia."
— Rebecca Gayle Howell, author of American Purgatory
“Prepare yourself for a transporting journey into the Appalachian South with all its beauty and decay, its radiance and self-destructive tendencies. The portraits of family members, friends, and assorted locals are especially rich and haunting, rendered with incredible depth, dimension, and feeling. Ian Hall has the ear and timing of a jazz master and the daring of a successful transporter of moonshine. There's hardly a line without something to admire, some moment I know I'll want to revisit in this memorable and masterful debut.”
— James Kimbrell, author of The Law of Truly Large Numbers
Available Editions
| EDITION | Paperback |
| ISBN | 9781958094662 |
| PRICE | $19.99 (USD) |
| PAGES | 139 |