“Writing in the voice of a rock and roll icon like Keith Richards is an incredible risk, but Hilary Sideris proves up to the task. 'Most Likely to Die' is a romp. With each poem's series of couplets like a guitar tab, her fingering is spot on -- she hits all the notes, and dishes out some wicked riffs.” -- Gerry LaFemina, author of "Steampunk" and "Vanishing Horizon" “You needn't give a toss about Keith Richards or his autobiography to love Hilary Sideris's 'Most Likely To Die.' Each poem is a stand-alone vignette, with the lasting resonance of a haiku. But the cumulative power of this volume is visceral. These poems, one after another, each as rich as a blues 78, have attitude while still being tender. Covering the full arc of Richards's life, from wartime Britain to Altamont and other crossroads, these poems exemplify how a precise image or anecdote can make an everyman out of an icon.” -- Steve Koenig, Editor of "Acoustic Levitation" “WOW. Where does one begin? As a jazzman of the same generation, on a similar path, and the designated driver for several stoned-out peers, to and from the famous Altamont concert, I find these poems ring many distant and familiar bells. Earthy and scathingly honest reflections on the Rolling Stones' interactions with substances, one another and their early musical influences, this is a clear and concise portal into their lives and processes of creating the music we've come to know and love.” -- Ron McClure, Bassist Published by Poets Wear Prada, Hoboken, NJ Hilary Sideris is the author of four poetry chapbooks: "The Orange Juice Is Over" (Finishing Line Press, 2008), "Baby" (Pudding House Press, 2009), "Gold & Other Fish" (Finishing Line Press, 2011), and "Sweet Flag" (Finishing Line Press, 2013). Her work appears in the anthologies "Pomegranate Seeds: An Anthology of Greek American Poetry," edited by Dean Kostos (Somerset Hall Press, 2008); "Token Entry: NYC Subway Poems," edited by Gerry LaFemina (Smalls Books / Red Lashes Productions, 2012); and in the forthcoming "Rabbit Ears: Poems About TV," edited by Joel Allegretti. Sideris studied English Literature at Indiana University and attended The University of Iowa Writers' Workshop. She lives in Brooklyn and works for The City University of New York, where she develops and coordinates programs for English language learners and first-generation college students.