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We encourage you to purchase Windfall Press books through local independent bookstores. If they don't have a particular book in stock, they wil generally be glad to order it for you. In Portland, the following bookstores usually carry Windfall books:

Amazon also carries Windfall Press titles.

 

Gnarl Ridge
by Michael McDowell

“Michael McDowell’s Gnarl Ridge is a celebration of mountain trails and urban walks gathered in one encompassing thought, that life is better when we experience nature and the outdoors away from city lights and highway lanes. There are unexpected rock falls (‘Crater Lake Seasonal Work’) or narrow trails with daunting drop offs. Winter storms cast down surprise trees blocking familiar paths (‘Bald Mountain Blowdown’). ‘A varied thrush . . . . A strand of spider silk,’ even ‘an owl’s vomit of fur, bones, and teeth of a mouse’ remind us that we are not the only lives on the planet. Whether or not McDowell’s collection inspires readers to explore trails on their own, his poems definitely offer a delightful vicarious adventure in nature.” —Barbara Drake, author of The Road to Lilac Hill and Peace at Heart

"Michael McDowell has been there and done that. He has a deep and loving intimacy with the Pacific Northwest, of the sort that ends in deep and loving poetry.” —David Guterson, author of Turn Around Time and Snow Falling on Cedars

Sample poems: "Restoration" "Ultralight Backpackers"

ISBN 979-8-9893098-0-1
Paperback / 96 pages
Price $18.00

Fall 2023

Van Gogh's Starry Night painting

 

Starry Night
by Bill Siverly

"Whether probing historical events for cautionary lessons, revisiting personal memories with retrospective irony, or reporting the minute satisfactions of working in his garden, Bill Siverly’s poems marry a critical eye to a lyrical voice. Measured in tone and line, Siverly’s poems are often 'startled by the amplitude of being.' His poems never shrink from evoking the escalating dangers of climate chaos and domestic fascism. But even if his unplanted garden beds may look like graves, the 'Bare mounds are eager to begin.'” —Charles Goodrich, author of Insects of South Corvallis, Going to Seed, A Scripture of Crows, and Watering the Rhubarb.

"Employing a mirrored parallelism for both individual poems and this entire collection, Bill Siverly takes us on a journey that encompasses Germany, his childhood in Idaho, the pandemic, and the drought. Although Starry Night celebrates the balm of the natural world and the joys of a passionate marriage, the gravitas of the tone here is clear: These poems implicate us fully in the destruction we’ve wrought on our world. Siverly’s lyric voice demands we acknowledge 'how in one lifetime we’ve greased the skids / of our human demise.'” —Paulann Petersen, Oregon Poet Laureate Emerita, author of One Small Sun

ISBN 978-0-9700302-9-0
Paperback / 76 pages
Price $18.00
Summer 2022

Cover image of a woman standing on a road


Refugee: The Journey of an East German Woman
by Jutta Donath

Beginning with her childhood in the East Germany of the 1940s, we follow the author on her family's dangerous flight from communism. As refugees, they move from town to town in 1950s West Germany, finally settling north of Frankfurt, where Jutta spends her teenage years. After marrying an American army intelligence officer, she emigrates to Oregon, her husband's home state. She learns about America and its customs as an outsider. Like her father, she struggles with alcoholism, eventually finding her way to recovery. After remarriage in 1989, she finds refuge at home in Portland.

"Through the eyes of a little girl, we see the world in postwar East Germany from an unusual, touching perspective. Horrors and fears like hunger, surveillance in East Germany, and finally flight to the West become real for the reader, but remain through a child's perspective beautifully new. Jutta lets the reader view a suspenseful chapter of history. Each stroke of fate makes it possible for her to move forward, and finally, the author takes us with her into adulthood." —Julia Gottschalk, MD

ISBN 978-0-9700302-8-3
Paperback / 346 pages
Price $16.99
Winter 2021

cover of the road to lilac hill

The Road to Lilac Hill
by Barbara Drake

"I love Barbara Drake’s warmhearted and intimate and modest voice in these poems. I love, especially, the way she evokes the nostalgic past without sentimentality but with great good humor and wonder; and how she looks at the natural world, even the tiniest blooms underfoot, with such close attention and curiosity and appreciation. In these poems it’s as if we are sitting across the kitchen table from a dear friend, a friend who is funny and kind, who can always find the magic in the commonplace." —Molly Gloss, author of The Hearts of Horses

"Barbara Drake is one of a kind, an original. She writes about the plainest, the most ordinary things—in poems made with such a light touch they almost float off the page. They are delightful, in the highest sense of that word. Fetching. Sheep, wildflowers, granddaughters, and border collies inhabit them, and a 'kestrel on the telephone wire / . . . enjoying her morning mouse, / whose limp tail dangles like an untied shoestring.' Effervescent poems. Deft. Luminous. Down-home." —Clemens Starck, author of Cathedrals & Parking Lots: Collected Poems

ISBN 978-0-9700302-7-6
Paperback / 112 pages
Price $18
Fall 2018

cover image of a medieval church across a river

Nightfall
by Bill Siverly

"These interesting, eminently readable poems are part everyday observation, part Central European history, part travelogue, and part philosophical musing and meditation. They read like uniform diary entries compiled by a man of refined sensibility and intellect who is acutely aware of the world around him, both political and natural. At times haunting and melancholy, at times joyful and celebratory, taken all together they constitute a remarkable book." —Clemens Starck, author of Old Dogs, New Tricks

"A beautiful and scrupulously crafted book of social commentary and narrative. The poems in Nightfall remind us that history is personal, whether it involves a house in Germany from which relatives once fled for their lives, a trout stream in Idaho, the lost stories of a city’s neighborhoods, or a lover’s smile. We live with connections and consequences—the past should never be forgotten." —Barbara Drake, author of Morning Light: Wildflowers, Night Skies, and Other Ordinary Joys of Oregon Country Life

 

Lovesong for Dufur cover

Lovesong for Dufur
by Penelope Scambly Schott

"In Lovesong for Dufur, Penelope Scambly Schott tells the intriguing story of buying a modest old house in an out-of-the-way, east-of-the mountains Oregon town. The town, Dufur, is small enough that everyone knows what necessities are in the food bank, 'toilet paper and laundry soap,' and 'who shot whom.' It is the sort of town people often refer to as in the middle of nowhere, but she falls in love with the place and makes it her own, affirming that 'There is No Blue Like This Blue Sky over Dufur.' These charming and original poems are enough to make you want to go in search of your own alternate life in the wonderful Western nowhere." —Barbara Drake

"I have lived all my life in Wasco County except for World War II. I have lived in Dufur since 1973. Penelope's poetry made me look at this little town in a better and different way." —Everett Marvel, retired rancher, age 90, member of the unofficial DP morning coffee club at Kramer's Market

ISBN 978-0-9700302-5-2
Paperback / 50 pages
Price $15
Spring 2013



steptoe butte cover Steptoe Butte
by Bill Siverly

"Every poem in Steptoe Butte is beautifully balanced on a middle line, and the book as a whole, balanced on a middle poem. It’s a structure that encourages backing and forthing, as you sound out the conversation and correspondences, poem to poem; and this reading and rereading for pleasure and deeper understanding is, to my way of thinking, the greatest gift a book of poetry can offer a reader." —Molly Gloss

"In Steptoe Butte, Bill Siverly demonstrates a poetic structure developed from millennia of European and indigenous oral poetry. Each poem’s stanzas balance on a fulcrum of a middle line which carries a central thought. And the thoughts range widely, from relapse and detox to grandchildren learning to plant potatoes, from the massacres marking American conquest to an intimate evening in Germany marking a 'love redeemed.' Steptoe Butte takes us from cultivated garden to wild sacred mountain, from the writer’s home to the dwellings of Goethe, Heidegger, Jung. In clear, succinct, crisp, language, Siverly holds the mirror up to life today and life as it has been, presenting a parade of images that leaves the reader a bit more understanding, a bit more questioning, and deeply pleased." —Michael McDowell

ISBN 978-0-9700302-4-5
Paperback / 72 pages
Price $15
Spring 2013

Cover of The Hundred-Year House

The Hundred-Year House
by Michael McDowell

"Michael McDowell clearly knows the nuanced seasons of the great Northwest at all elevations. In The Hundred-Year House these deeply felt poems take us from Washington’s Long Beach Peninsula, to Portland’s Council Crest, to the Timberline Trail in the Mt. Hood Wilderness. His poetic voice expresses a love of family and place that combines sweetness with a wry wit as he tells stories that begin with a great-grandmother planting pine seeds at the family beach house in 1883 and take us into the 21st century and a daughter watching the flash of a lighthouse through pine branches. This rich and lovely collection provides a myriad of shared memories for those who know the region and those who would like to." —Barbara Drake

"From sand in the sheets to moles in the lawn, too-present mosquitoes to absent meteors, night moose to Memaloose, Michael McDowell guides us through a wondrous maze of Northwest icons via language both lovely and loose. As he says in 'Burnt Toast,' 'there is no sweetness without ashes in the mouth,' but he delivers the hard parts and bitters wrapped in an essential sweetness that is deeply knowing, and anything but naive. Awake to the land, its life, and their working parts, McDowell tells his wonderfully varied tales with wit, whimsy, and devastating aim." —Robert Michael Pyle

ISBN 978-0-9700302-2-1
Paperback / 74 pages
Price $15
Fall 2011


What Remains  Was Bleibt

What Remains / Was Bleibt
by Ingrid Gottschalk
translated from the German by Jutta Donath and Daniella King

What Remains is a collection of poems in which the poet shares the experience of a love affair that lasted a lifetime. Two people, seemingly destined for each other since childhood, found themselves in other marriages, but remained connected. When they found each other again very late in their lives, their passion reignited. The poet speaks of her anguish, hope, sensuality, loneliness, longing, and despair. Her strong and clear language makes her poems not so much a lament but an account of every nuance of a passionate love affair.” —Jutta Donath

"Was Bleibt schildert das Erleben einer Liebe, die ein ganzes Leben lang bestehen bleibt. Von Kindheit an füreinander bestimmt, entschliessen sich diese zwei Menschen jedoch zu anderen Ehen, bleiben aber miteinander verbunden. Als sie spät in ihrem Leben wieder zueinander finden, flammt die alte Leidenschaft erneut auf. Die Dichterin spricht von Schmerz, Hoffnung, Erotik, Einsamkeit, Sehnsucht und Verzweiflung. Ihre starke und klare Sprache klagt jedoch nicht. Diese Gedichte sind Darstellung eines menschlichen Erlebnisses, das sie mit jeder Nuance einer leidenschaftlichen Liebe beschreibt." —Jutta Donath

ISBN 978-0-9700302-3-8
Paperback Bilingual Edition / 56 pages
Price $10 / €11
Fall 2010


cover of Driving One Hundred

Driving One Hundred
by Barbara Drake

“Barbara Drake’s witty humor, appreciated over the years by many readers, seeps joyfully into these pages. But that’s not all. There’s the ever-accurate observation of birds and the natural world, brought vividly into the reader’s imagination; and the startling and beautiful images: I’m left with a red horse standing chest high in a marsh. Underneath the well-honed poetic voice, stretches a bedrock of wisdom gained from looking squarely at the world around her and at the passing of years in a life well examined.” —Judith Barrington

 

ISBN 978-0-9700302-1-4
Paperback / 112 pages
Price $15
Fall 2009






The Turn cover

The Turn: Poems and Reflections 1987-1997
by Bill Siverly

"The Turn"—die Wende—refers to November 1989, when the Berlin Wall came down. The pieces in this book were written in light of that upwelling of spirit, when old political tensions were passing from the scene and something new was going on, a transition of hope rising. They also concern a ten-year period, 1987-1997, a longer, slower turn of the wheel in Germany—and elsewhere in Europe—at levels both personal and political, towards the process of reunification. Now, on the 20th anniversary of the events in the book, the questions raised are just as pertinent.

 

ISBN 09-9700302-0-7
Paperback / 96 pages
Price $10
Spring 2000

Also by Bill Siverly, from Traprock Books

Clearwater Way: Poems
by Bill Siverly

Clearwater Way is a journey from the Washington Coast, up the Columbia, Snake, and Clearwater rivers, through Lewiston (my hometown), and into the woods of north Idaho. In personal terms it represents a journey back in time to my childhood in the 1950s and '60s. The inspiration to make this book a journey upriver came from the Wasco myth cycle about Coyote, who, starting at the mouth of the Columbia, created land forms, resources, and cultural practices as far as Lapwai, Idaho. Clearwater Way evokes this landscape. Some places within it can no longer be found except in the deeper layers of memory and the unconscious, and in the poetry that draws them back and gives them life and the past regained. Other places remain as present as rivers and mountains themselves, the resonance of their being echoing through our lives and in these poems.—Bill Siverly

Traprock Books
Available from Windfall Press
ISBN 978-0-9817984-0-0
Paperback / 112 pages
Price $15
Summer 2009



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