False Spring
Author: Amie Zimmerman
Publisher: Roof Books (2026)
Amie Zimmerman’s False Spring, her first collection, rings true in its politics and its form. Today, when poetry’s circuitous approaches remain the norm, Zimmerman tackles the problems of the moment head on: “this war is a real war / voting can’t fix.” Zimmerman is not conciliatory in any meaningful way: “if we organize around the kindness principle / we’ll get bullets in our eyes.” Her politics and her unremitting insistence to be herself appear in the way every word connects to its neighbor: “what is the value of here / here.” False Spring shows the reader how to “…learn / how to love something / more than yourself.”
Organized in three sections, False Spring weaves together fragmented lyric and polemic to expose the contradictions inherent in care, labor, and resistance. The recurring “false spring” motif pings between hope and trauma, while the “Walter Benjamin” poems anchor philosophical inquiry in the body. Zimmerman’s voice is polyphonic, shifting from collective declarations to private implosions, often within the same stanza. Poems like “Surplus” and “the street” confront institutional brutality and economic precarity, while “On the Nature of Bondage” uses constraint-based experimentation to dismantle poetic authority.
Zimmerman’s language is both lush and caustic, invoking flora, bodily fluids, and domestic rituals as sites of renewal and disappointment. The first poem in the last section, “Mother,” refracts love and legacy through riotous tenderness with a gesture toward communal survival and poetic witness. False Spring refuses to offer an elixir for what ails America as a nation today.