Close Menu
Savannah HeraldSavannah Herald
  • Home
  • News
    • Local
    • State
    • National
    • World
    • HBCUs
  • Events
  • Directories
  • Weather
  • Traffic
  • Sports
  • Politics
  • Lifestyle
    • Faith
    • Senior Living
    • Health
    • Travel
    • Beauty
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Art & Literature
  • Business
    • Real Estate
    • Entertainment
    • Investing
    • Education
  • Guides
    • Juneteenth Guide
    • Black History Savannah
    • MLK Guide Savannah
We're Social
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • YouTube

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Trending
  • Pooh Shiesty Surprises His Mom With $1.1 Million Home
  • lululemon Announces the Appointment of Esi Eggleston Bracey to its Board of Directors
  • India Love Addresses Rakai’s Influence On Youth
  • HBCU baseball gets Wrigley Field spotlight as Alabama A&M faces Prairie View A&M
  • Georgia Democrats decry steep drop in ACA enrollment  
  • Shai-Hulud Malware in PyTorch Lightning: A Critical Supply Chain Attack Analysis
  • Feedback Bias? How AI Adjusts Replies Based on Race and Gender, Research Finds
  • Roy Cohen remembers Aseel Aslih with ‘Far From Maine’
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
Login
Savannah HeraldSavannah Herald
  • Home
  • News
    • Local
    • State
    • National
    • World
    • HBCUs
  • Events
  • Directories
  • Weather
  • Traffic
  • Sports
  • Politics
  • Lifestyle
    • Faith
    • Senior Living
    • Health
    • Travel
    • Beauty
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Art & Literature
  • Business
    • Real Estate
    • Entertainment
    • Investing
    • Education
  • Guides
    • Juneteenth Guide
    • Black History Savannah
    • MLK Guide Savannah
Savannah HeraldSavannah Herald
Home » A review of Prayer to the Invisible by Diane Frank – Compulsive Reader
Art & Literature

A review of Prayer to the Invisible by Diane Frank – Compulsive Reader

Savannah HeraldBy Savannah HeraldApril 27, 20266 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
A review of Prayer to the Invisible by Diane Frank – Compulsive Reader
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Black Arts & Culture Feature:

Key takeaways
  • Dreams recur as a visionary consciousness, central to Prayer to the Invisible, shaping imagery and section titles.
  • The invisible recurs as a guiding concept, exploring loss, memory, and the afterlife across many elegies.
  • Diane Frank memorializes the dead tenderly, notably in Prayer to the Invisible, elegy for Doctor Jerry Rabinowitz.
  • Cosmic imagery references Orion, Saturn, exoplanets, and speculative journeys beyond galaxies.
  • Music and ekphrastic poems enrich the collection, from symphonies and cello to paintings and photographs.

Reviewed by Charles Rammelkamp

Prayer to the Invisible
by Diane Frank
Blue Light Press
Jan 2026, $20.00, 126 pages, ISBN: 978-1-4218-3601-0

“Drink this!” the first line of the first poem, “Appalachian Symphony,” in Diane Frank’s lyrical new collection exuberantly commands, and the final line of the final poem, “three haiku,” echoes the impulse of appreciation:

gratitude gratitude gratitude

Between the two we are treated to Frank’s image of the world, full of imagination and prophecy. Dreams and dreaming are a theme throughout Prayer to the Invisible, mostly as a visionary state of consciousness rather than in the aspirational sense, though hopefulness is indeed at the core of Frank’s vision. Some poem titles include “Dream Horse,” “The Dream Quilt,” “Arctic Dreams,” “Twin Dreams.” “Dream” is one of the six sections of “The Urge to Fly” just as “The Last Dream” is one of the parts of “The Last Sunset” and “The Embryo Begins to Dream” is a section of “The Quiet Time.”

Throughout the book Frank invokes dreams. For instance, dreams are all over “The Quiet Time”:  “our dreams began to fly / to the stars on Orion’s belt”; “an angel skin coral grotto dreamed of golden fish”; “in a dream / we waltzed on a polished wooden floor”; “a starfish is dreaming / turquoise in salt water.” “Midnight on the Town Square,” “Some Days You Wake Up Singing,” “Oracle,” “Winter Landscape,” “Ghost Boat,” “Ice House Blues,” “Light the Way,” “Cat on the Roof,” “Quintara Street,” “Rattlesnake,” “The Masks Come Off,” “Double Exposure,” “The History of Bees,” “Triptych,” “Hymn to Polar Bears, Icebergs and Stars” “Walking on the Edge of Everything,” “Something about Round,” “Flying to the Moon,” and “butterfly moon” all explicitly refer to dreams and dreaming, while others feel dreamlike in their narratives.

In the eponymous poem, “Prayer to the Invisible,” a moving elegy to Doctor Jerry Rabinowitz, one of the eleven victims of the 2018 Tree of Life Synagogue massacre in Pittsburgh, Frank writes:

When you came to me in a dream
from the other place,
I told you how much I missed you.
You let me know
you can do even more healing
where you are now, out of your body.

Later in the poem, Frank writes, “I write your name in the invisible / where you disappeared that morning.”

The invisible is a key concept in Diane Frank’s poetry and thought. It recurs in “Some Days You Wake Up Singing” (“ocean birds / continue their migration / to an invisible world”), “Quintara Street,” which is an elegy for her dead friend Mickey, who’d been a slave in a Japanese internment camp in Indonesia during World War Two (“When it’s my time / to walk through the door to the invisible, / I know that Mickey will be waiting…”), and in “The Last Sunset,” a poem whose tone is similarly elegiac: “everything you know / merging into an invisible world….”

Frank’s vision throughout Prayer to the Invisible is cosmic, intergalactic. She refers to Orion’s belt in “The Quiet Time” and “Flying to the Moon,” the moon and constellations in multiple poems, the rings of Saturn, exoplanets, the Minoan Oracles and more. In “Flying into the Singularity” she asks:

What if the stars you remember
were speeding through time
at a velocity beyond the possible?
Beyond the Milky Way.
Beyond the cluster of galaxies
where we swim through time
into the dark matter of the universe
and the chain-linked mysteries it holds.

And again in “Riding the Wind with Prayer Flags,” another poem for the memory of a dead friend, George James (“Your voice from the other world”):

I know there are other places in the universe
where we can create and uncreate
a solar system, a sacred hymn, our lives.
At times I wonder where I will go
after I take my sacred leap.

As we’ve seen, Frank writes heartfelt poems about her dead. “Scattering,” for instance, is a poem about tossing the ashes of a dead friend into the Pacific Ocean (“to see my sweet friend / as a bag of ashes labeled with her name / is hard”). Yet several poems that involve her parents bring a smile. “My Dad Meets Stephen Dunn in the Afterlife” is one.

Stephen is playing basketball
with then moon
and my Dad is playing baseball
with a bevy of meteorites,
his curly auburn hair
dancing out of a Merchant Marines cap
in my favorite photograph.

Her mom takes center stage in “Walking with My Mom in December” and “How High the Moon”:

In a night club somewhere out there,
my beautiful mother is singing
How High the Moon
in her black evening gown
with rhinestone straps that shine like stars
from the window of a Dragon.

Both parents and her grandparents appear in “Ice House Blues” and in “Five Tanka.”

Music, of course, is another important theme in Diane Frank’s oeuvre. Frank played cello for the Golden Gate Symphony for almost two decades and now does the same with the College of Marin Symphony Orchestra. The titles of some of her other books indicate the significance of music in her work – While Listening to the Enigma Variations, a collection of poems, and her novel, Mermaids and Musicians. In Prayer to the Universe poems like “Appalachian Symphony,” “The Oboist,” “While Listening to Mahler’s 2nd Symphony,” and “The Class of 2020” have orchestral elements, and “The Book of Disappearing” ends with the humorous image:

Meanwhile, Jacqueline du Pré
is playing a concerto at Carnegie Hall –
in her cellophane dress.
Everyone wants to pretend
it didn’t happen.

Ekphrastic poems, poems inspired by or about works of art, are also part of Frank’s work. “Midnight on the Town Square,” “Wings of Stars,” “Flame of Wisdom,” “Winter Landscape,” “Light the Way,” “Slow Awakening,” “Plein Air Painting” (“Birds fly out of the landscape”)  and “Upper Antelope Canyon” all take their inspiration from paintings or photographs.

But my favorites are the poems that involve youthful shenanigans. There are the poems about attending Hebrew school as a child – “Fourth Grade” and “The Labyrinth.” The latter ends:

Sometimes you have to forget your history
to keep walking through the mist
and feel your way in the darkness
by touching the labyrinth walls.

And then there are the poems about young love, “The Year of Kafka” and “Consensual Mathematics.” The latter involves the “hard sciences,” Math, Biology, etc. The young woman in the poem is having difficulties because she has not taken calculus. She goes to her teaching assistant for help. The poem ends mischievously:

They looked through a telescope
to witness the curve of time,
a maze of biodiversity
as she sat on his lap in biology lab
developing a private language of
consensual mathematics.

Diane Frank’s poetry is accessible and a pleasure to read. Her wisdom makes you stop and think about your own existence.

About the reviewer: Charles Rammelkamp is Prose Editor for Brick House Books in Baltimore and Reviews Editor for The Adirondack Review. His most recent releases are Sparring Partners from Mooonstone Press, Ugler Lee from Kelsay Books, Catastroika from Apprentice House, Presto from Bamboo Dart Press, See What I Mean? from Kelsay Books, The Trapeze of Your Flesh from Blazevox Books, and most recently, The Tao According to Calvin Coolidge, published by Kelsay Books.

Read more from the original source


African Art African Textiles Afrofuturism Art and Identity Arts and Culture News Black Art History Black Artists Black Authors Black Creators Black Literature Black Sci-Fi and Fantasy Black Women in Art Black-Owned Bookstores Book Reviews Contemporary Black Art creative expression Cultural Commentary Fashion and Expression Poetry and Prose Street Art and Design
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Savannah Herald
  • Website

Related Posts

Entertainment May 1, 2026

Pooh Shiesty Surprises His Mom With $1.1 Million Home

Entertainment May 1, 2026

India Love Addresses Rakai’s Influence On Youth

Entertainment April 30, 2026

NEXT: BunnaB Is Building Her Own Atlanta Legacy

Entertainment April 30, 2026

Patrick Muldoon cause of death confirmed after Days of Our Lives, Starship Troopers actor died aged 57

Entertainment April 29, 2026

Manny Pacquiao Mocks Floyd Mayweather Jr. Ahead Of Historic Rematch

Entertainment April 29, 2026

Accused WHCD Gunman Took Selfie with Weapons Before Incident, See the Pic

Comments are closed.

Don't Miss
Food November 1, 2025By Savannah Herald010 Mins Read

Smudged Corn – Britney Breaks Bread

November 1, 2025

Fresh from the Cooking Area: Recipes & Food Concepts This simple smudged corn dish is…

Regular Exercise May Boost Prostate Cancer Survival

September 18, 2025

JaCobian Morgan: From Canton to Jackson to HBCU Champion, Now the NFL Draft

April 14, 2026

Holcombe Rucker Park in Harlem designated as a historical site

November 1, 2025

What Really Happened to the Natural Hair Movement? Inside the Shift No One Saw Coming

November 1, 2025
Archives
  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
Categories
  • Art & Literature
  • Beauty
  • Black History
  • Business
  • Climate
  • Education
  • Employment
  • Entertainment
  • Faith
  • Fashion
  • Food
  • Gaming
  • Georgia Politics
  • HBCUs
  • Health
  • Health Inspections
  • Home & Garden
  • Investing
  • Lifestyle
  • Local
  • Lowcountry News
  • National
  • National Opinion
  • News
  • Obituaries
  • Politics
  • Real Estate
  • Science
  • Senior Living
  • Sports
  • SSU Homecoming 2024
  • State
  • Tech
  • Transportation
  • Travel
  • World
Savannah Herald Newsletter

Subscribe to Updates

A round up interesting pic’s, post and articles in the C-Port and around the world.

About Us
About Us

The Savannah Herald is your trusted source for the pulse of Coastal Georgia and the Low County of South Carolina. We're committed to delivering timely news that resonates with the African American community.

From local politics to business developments, we're here to keep you informed and engaged. Our mission is to amplify the voices and stories that matter, shining a light on our collective experiences and achievements.
We cover:
🏛️ Politics
💼 Business
🎭 Entertainment
🏀 Sports
🩺 Health
💻 Technology
Savannah Herald: Savannah's Black Voice 💪🏾

Our Picks

This Earth Day, Humanity Is Failing Our “First Commandment”

April 21, 2026

Where Was ‘Good Cop/Bad Cop’ Filmed? Explore The Gold Coast Of Queensland, Australia

November 1, 2025

Frank Grimsley of The Circle on Living With HS During the Holidays

December 23, 2025

She Was Recovering From One Surgery When She Found Out She Had Cancer

April 23, 2026

Troops Tied to Trump’s Caribbean Drug-Interdiction Surge to be Housed at St. Croix “Man Camp” – Repeating Islands

November 3, 2025
Categories
  • Art & Literature
  • Beauty
  • Black History
  • Business
  • Climate
  • Education
  • Employment
  • Entertainment
  • Faith
  • Fashion
  • Food
  • Gaming
  • Georgia Politics
  • HBCUs
  • Health
  • Health Inspections
  • Home & Garden
  • Investing
  • Lifestyle
  • Local
  • Lowcountry News
  • National
  • National Opinion
  • News
  • Obituaries
  • Politics
  • Real Estate
  • Science
  • Senior Living
  • Sports
  • SSU Homecoming 2024
  • State
  • Tech
  • Transportation
  • Travel
  • World
  • Privacy Policies
  • Disclaimers
  • Terms and Conditions
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Opt-Out Preferences
  • Accessibility Statement
Copyright © 2002-2026 Savannahherald.com All Rights Reserved. A Veteran-Owned Business

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}
Ad Blocker Enabled!
Ad Blocker Enabled!
Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login below or Register Now.

Lost password?

Register Now!

Already registered? Login.

A password will be e-mailed to you.