The Occupant (2025)

Pitt Poetry Series, 2025

The Occupant is a collection of persona and prose poems that explores the “inner lives” of common household objects, along with that of “The Occupant” of the house, their human keeper. Taken together, their shifting perspectives engage questions of time, mortality, and the nature of consciousness itself, reminding readers of the beauty and strangeness that lurk under the surface of ordinary thought—the “other world” that, as Paul Éluard noted, “resides in this one.”

The Author reading “The Occupant Imagines the House as a Great Fish

Maggie Smith, “The Slowdown” (nationally syndicated podcast, Nov. 2025)

Reviews:

None of the great poets of the life of things, Francis Ponge, Pablo Neruda, Marianne Moore, Elizabeth Bishop, as I recall, wonder if their regard for things is proper or ethical or distorting. . . . Here, Maier reminds us that we are objects possessed by an even larger object. The Occupant is one of those rare books that can change the way we look at things and at ourselves.

— Mark Jarman, The Hudson Review

From the moment I began to read, these poems took my breath away—or quieted it, so I could hear the voices of the various objects that speak, as individual flowers do in Louise Glück’s The Wild Iris—a conch shell, a whisk, matches, lingerie. The Occupant’s enchantment is also the reader’s. 

— Sharon Bryan, author of Sharp Stars

 This is what makes The Occupant unique—these are not [simply] clever poems about these objects, but rather poems that allow them to reveal the occupant’s character, raise essential questions about time and beauty and how ‘we light’ our lives to keep darkness at bay. This is a mature, intelligent, and technically deft book of poems. It is an absolute pleasure to read. 

— Robert Cording, author of Without My Asking

I want to call this book magical, and it is, but it's the magic of the everyday, of the aliveness and attention that flow into and through us when we can turn ourselves to meet them. Which, thankfully, Maier does, finding over and over that the things of this world are telling us everything we most need to hear. 

— Kasey Jueds, author of The Thicket