BOOKS & CHAPBOOKS
Thin as Air (chapbook). Published by Salt Water Media (September 12, 2025). ORDER FROM BOOKSHOP, AMAZON, BARNES & NOBLE, OR DIRECTLY FROM AUTHOR.
In Thin as Air, poet Ellie Altman faces with curiosity and confusion the reality of her own aging body and the question of where to find the nourishment she needs as her muscles and bones spin themselves finer and finer with each passing day. Will she eventually become so slender and spare, taking up so little space, that her diaphanous heart scatters in the wind? In each poem, she “deftly darts on surfaces into a disappearing act, // gathering observations without leaving a trace.” But despite her fears, there is joy in the idea of smallness too—the small moments and little things that make each day worth flitting and fluttering through. On the underside of every struggle, every questioning, is the soft, persistent glow of optimism as these poems embrace the late season as the time for rebirth—her slow unraveling and shrinking making way for a metamorphosis.
PRAISE FOR THIN AS AIR
“In Thin as Air, Ellie Altman dances us through the ways identity shifts: from age to age, person to person, role to role, reflection to inflection. We see the things we know ourselves by transmuted into a new way of understanding the world. The way we dress to face the day, the foods we eat, the places we visit, the things we count carefully and hold close become the threads of a new lyric patchwork that at once solidifies and makes ephemeral the faces the mirror tells us are our own. These poems ask us to reckon with the fact that each us is made of a you and an I. Then it asks us to wrestle what you and I even mean.” —John A. Nieves, editor of The Shore
“Thin as Air captures Ellie Altman’s keen eye for the nuances of an older woman’s daily life. These poems gracefully explore the journey of aging, blending humor with a touch of heartbreak. As the poet so elegantly puts it, ‘the last gasp as I begin to prepare to disappear into thin air.’ Growing older is not for the faint-hearted, but Altman’s poems reveal it as a journey to be embraced, not feared. These quiet moments resonate, leaving a lasting impact on both the narrator and the reader. A quick read, but one that lingers in the mind.” —Constance Brewer, editor of Gyroscope Review
Within Walking Distance (chapbook), with illustrations by Emily Kalwaitis. Independently published (January 31, 2023). ORDER FROM BOOKSHOP, AMAZON, OR DIRECTLY FROM AUTHOR.
From street gutter to garden path, from coffee shop to alleyway, Within Walking Distance maps the intimate intricacies of small-town life in the footsteps of a poet and her faithful dog. Ellie Altman’s whimsical poems grapple with an aging woman’s sense of belonging in her environment, as she oscillates between feeling at home and feeling like an outsider. There’s a closeness here that she thrives within and pushes back against, like the alley’s “brick walls holding / the night sky in a narrow chute.” And alongside each of these hauntingly charming poems float the dreamlike watercolors of Emily Kalwaitis, a visual artist who lives in this same riverside town. With these enchanting pairings of poem and painting, Within Walking Distance captures a vivid sense of place in equal parts sincerity and irony, foreboding and wonder.
PRAISE FOR WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE
“In poems that are both playful and profound, Ellie Altman takes us on a dog-walk through the small corners of her hometown. Alongside the poet and her loyal pooch, we revel in the surprising tidbits daily life offers up. Luminous illustrations by Emily Kalwaitis amplify our discoveries. This little gem is a tail wag and a delight.” —Meredith Davies Hadaway, author of At the Narrows
“Ellie Altman’s charmingly illustrated Within Walking Distance chronicles a woman’s journey to herself as the speaker, by turns tentative and bold, attempts to find her footing, step by step in a new town. As a newcomer, she frets ‘…what did passersby think of the owner of the welcome-yellow house with dead shrubs—a gaping hole in its otherwise cheerful smile?’ Yet, over the walking miles to and from town with her beloved dog, she has beat her own path, and can lay claim to her own identity and place: ‘I am a poet. I do what I do’ in ‘a riot of life . . . set against / the stage’s backdrop of manicured privet.’” —Nancy Mitchell, author of The Out-of-Body Shop
LITERARY MAGAZINES & ANTHOLOGIES
“The Anorexic Conservationist,” Thimble Literary Magazine, Issue 6.4 (Spring 2024).
“A Kintsugi Practice,” Book of Matches, Issue 10 (Winter 2024).
“After Dark,” The Keeping Room, Minerva Rising Press (2023).
“How I Became a Stewing Chicken,” Gyroscope Review, Issue 21.4 Crone Power (Fall 2021).
“Inventory,” The Shore (Fall 2021).
“How to Peel an Egg,” The Broad River Review, 50th Anniversary Issue (2018).
