HABITATS

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HABITATS, Garrett Ashley's debut full-length poetry collection, traces life across Southern ecosystems and domestic spaces, examining how ecology, history, and lived experience shape what we call home—and how we learn to live inside places irreparably marked by pressure and extraction.

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HABITATS is a poetry collection that moves through shared ecosystems—coastal waterways and tidal rivers, fields and flood plains, pine forests, sweltering Southern towns, and rural homesteads—tracing how lives take place under sustained pressure. Across these poems, Garrett Ashley follows how ecology, lived experience, and history gather over time into what we call home, and into both the natural and built environments we share.

Structured in three sections, the collection moves from public landscapes into more intimate, lived space. Early poems unfold along beaches, docks, and rivers, where family histories surface alongside labor, inheritance, and absence. At the center of the book, a lyric Field Guide to North American Trees reframes botanical language as a way of understanding how people are shaped. Trees appear not as metaphor alone, but as witnesses to use, extraction, care, and endurance. This section expands the method of Ashley’s chapbook A Field Guide to North American Trees, deepening its emotional and narrative reach.

The final section turns toward interiors and settlement. Neighbors negotiate fences. Nights stretch thin with noise. Homes bear the marks of wear, improvisation, and temporary shelter. Throughout, landscapes and domestic spaces remain active forces rather than backdrops, shaping how people move through them and what they carry forward.

Readers and writers have praised Ashley’s work for its precision and attentiveness. William Woolfitt describes his poems as “polyvocal, uncanny, pulsing with desire,” while Glenis Redmond notes how his writing invites us to walk alongside the poet, “rewarded by this trek,” grounded in the act of witnessing. Angela Ball has written of the “strange and pungent testament” found in Ashley’s poetic voice—language that lingers long after it’s been read.

HABITATS, Ashley’s debut poetry collection, ultimately gathers its many places into a cumulative reckoning, affirming the fragile conditions through which a life learns its shape and honoring not permanence or protection, but the collective and shared insistence of living.

Garrett Ashley’s work has appeared in Asimov's Science Fiction, The Normal School, Sonora Review, Analog SF&F, DIAGRAM, Reed Magazine, and Sequestrum. He earned his PhD from the University of Southern Mississippi's Center for Writers and teaches creative writing at Tuskegee University in Alabama. He is also the author of Periphylla, and Other Deep Ocean Attractions (Press 53, 2024), A Field Guide to North American Trees (Good Printed Things, 2025), and HABITATS (Loblolly Press, 2026).

Loblolly Press Habitat book, a field guide to North American trees, featuring detailed illustrations and natural habitat photos.

Praise

From the start, Garrett Ashley casts a surreal, imagistic spell that pulls the reader in—offering brief moments to breathe before drawing us back again. Habitats is a book in which to become lost and transformed, and one I will read again and again.
— Scott Owens, First Poet Laureate of Hickory, NC, and author of Elemental
Ashley guides readers through the thickest terrain of memory with the precision of a single pine needle threading itself onto the wilderness floor. These poems offer sanctuary while grounding the unexpected—a vulnerable hope conceived from the sacred labor of remembering, where land and breath speak back to one another.
— Salaam Green, First Poet Laureate of Birmingham and author of The Other Revival
With Habitats, Ashley creates a biome of ghosts and memories, showing reverence to naturalism without confusing it for humanity or scholarship. Through precise imagery and radical lyricism, these poems reckon with loss and loneliness with an urgency that feels immediate and universal.
— James Wade, two-time Spur Award–winning author of Narrow the Road
In Ashley's work, the trees speak for themselves. This strange and pungent testament records sylvan voices with force and clarity. Reading these poems is an adventure you won't soon forget.
— Angela Ball, recipient of an NEA grant and author of Steeplechase
Polyvocal and uncanny, these poems pulse with desire. Ashley invites readers into an interconnected world where trees summon the loved and lost, where understories are people and the wind is a bird.
— William Woolfit, author of Eyes Moving Through the Dark
These poems remind us that trees are not abstractions, but nature's divinity. Ashley's surprising and brilliant approach to anthropomorphism recalls what poetry was meant to do.
— Dawn Major, James Dickey Fellow and author of The Bystanders
Moving through the landscape with exacting precision, Ashley renders each poem ripe with its own telling. These poems reward the act of witnessing, offering raw and necessary understories.
— Glenis Redmond, Inaugural Poet Laureate of Greenville, South Carolina

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