Featured Commentary |
on Killing Spree, poems by Jorie Graham
“Graham writes from within a world where catastrophe no longer announces itself as event and instead settles … into the very medium through which perception itself must now pass.”
“Graham writes from within a world where catastrophe no longer announces itself as event and instead settles … into the very medium through which perception itself must now pass.”
“They started in the middle of nowhere, heading towards what she supposed was the closest highway. The whole group began to walk, with the last rays of the sun skirting the hills that could be seen in the distance, very small, on the horizon.”
“Still I struggle to rise, breathing in the quiet, / trying to believe in patience / as I teach the child to make the bread, to mix the flour and water …”
“As this timely, incisive book suggests, liberty exists for the elect few, the rest of us be damned — a notion as American as Mom and apple pie.”
“In the beginning, the fatal beating is just a local news story. A curiosity to follow. Terrible behavior reported in a newspaper circulated through small towns and rural communities within an hour’s drive.”
“The poetry strips back the extra, the social, the trauma of living with people, to try to get to a physical, spiritual core that connects us across chronological time and to the physical world.”
“I am revealing a leniency that people will find strange, that people will fault me for. It’s true that these two men whom I have just briefly depicted offered me the tangible expression of union, and even of dignity. A kind of austerity enveloped them …”
“There is an uncanniness to how chillingly Rukeyser seems to anticipate aspects of our moment … understanding the deep impacts of living in perpetual war, her insight into the insidious interweaving of consumerism, journalism, and the war machine.”
“A person is a grieving monster, / said Aeschylus, the past / shapeless as muscle and expressed / as a faceless mass. It’s crawling out to eat.”
“His work takes on the larger picture of historical formation, human rights writ large, and its accretive echo across time, while also reveling in the very material culture that sustains it.”
“My tongue, as if sitting on it / Two minutes of a day / heavy enough / to crush words / coming out my mouth.”
“She urges all of us who live primarily in one language to recognize that our seeming linguistic purity or separateness is only an inability to see the differences that inhere between and within languages.”
“Under the Falls is a thriller, but at its best it’s concerned about that matter of haunting — about whether the child can ever be reconciled with the adult, and who gets hurt along the way.”
“She was nearing the end of book 72 in Dio Cassius, his chronicle of Ancient Rome, waiting on the line for which his book principally enjoys fame (“our history now descends from a kingdom of gold to one of iron and rust”), when she heard a disturbance in the yard.”
“On my third night there // I was out watering when my phone buzzed. / ‘I thought you all should know,’ the email began.”
“The book, which Levy dubs “a fiction” rather than “a novel,” functions as a brief journey through the titular writer’s pioneering career as well as a slice of Parisian life, relishing in wordplay that draws from Stein’s bag of tricks.”
“Here’s the nine-mile cigarette John Prine planned to light, / with a vodka and ginger ale, when he arrived here. / We’re on a heavenly balcony, it’s a starlit night …”
“What sets this anthology apart is its transparency and celebration of the translation process … offering readers a window into the creative, ethical, and at times collaborative negotiations behind the English versions.”
“Even what I didn’t have / was what I had — / I said that, / trying to believe myself / When I say myself I mean us / because / those were days when we were never found”
“… from seeing myself so much in this cracked mirror / I’ve lost all sense of my face / or, from talking about it so much, it’s become infinite to me”
“breathes out what you were / & were not — / myrrh & the hanging / music of smoke”
“It takes an image to describe the feeling / in another image; which is to say, / once I tore brittle leaves and hid them / in a book; which is to say, / whatever once lurked within / my honeycombed mind now evades / its reach …”
“In 2004 at age 94, the painter and sculptor Dorothea Tanning published A Table of Content, the first of her two poetry collections. Her poem ‘Sequestrienne’ begins, ‘Don’t look at me / for answers. What am I but / a sobriquet, / a teeth-grinder, / grinder of color, / and vanishing point?'”
“This novel is often brutally sad; it’s also often brutally funny. It’s neither a comic novel or a tragedy; instead, it’s something much stranger.”
“People my age like to wallow in nostalgia for the town, in a romantic narrative of slow living, of sunshine, sea, and wind. I envy them. I wish I could be more forgiving toward my hometown, and toward myself too.”
“We’re in public. Academic // coffee complete with neatly inked / questions in my notebook. He presses // gold-rimmed glasses closer …”
“If ‘Dream Song #10’’s dreaming Henry stands for Berryman dreaming … then the Song represents one of Berryman’s most agonized debates between his racist and his progressive instincts.”
“A strain that runs through Elisa Shua Dusapin’s novels: characters are let down quietly, delicately, the pain, like a pinprick, festering just below the surface.”
“At the end of La Bohème / Rudolpho gives Mimi a muff / to help keep her warm. / I thought of that as I held his hand. / It was midnight, an hour / until he let go of mine.”
“That Kociancich should have produced such an intricately surreal novel is perhaps unsurprising given that her English literature professor … was none other than Jorge Luis Borges.”
“The sky rises higher every moment. / On top of our heads a tile-blue hat / adds to the weight of Wanxi Basin. / From all directions laborers learn its lessons / and get more ignorant, too.”
“Now we recognize that what he explored and created are at the core of Artificial Intelligence, a technology transforming communication, research, design and the nature of work.”
“Where I was, was pitch dark. / I was alone in it, / with a sound like a chirp ‘ or what a broken windowpane might make / as its pieces fell slowly to the floor.”
“… we each experience our lives as seasons populated by foreigners within. These poems offer a textual reflection of these processes across time …”
“In the before is / everything possible / in the after even / the nothing that’s / there is missed / its absence / remarkable”
“Sax believes that insects’ lives render them especially suitable for comparison with human concepts and institutions. He highlights insect metamorphoses as a ‘model for human transformations.'”
“Slowly. / Yell at me. / So I can really hear you, fully grasp what you say / and determine who is in charge.”
“Heung’s work touches upon the universal sorrow over the loss of an irretrievable past but individualizes that experience by focusing on the poet’s own loss and pressuring it into something stranger – an ethics of sacrifice.”
“The one who is laughing defines what is funny, including comedy that is provocative or nasty. But at what point does comedy become hate speech issuing from xenophobia, misogyny, bias, or rage?”
“water worries the house posts / sits on the steps // moody / made of murk // eventually / we approach the door / the stairway down // carrying our lights / our tendency / to drown”
“Her open palms faced out — / she looked like she was asking for mercy. // I stopped playing with The Visible Woman / when she started reminding me / of Jesus Christ on his crucifix.”
“… If I were / in a painting, if you were // to turn that painting upside- / down, I’d fall from water // into sky. What would you see? / A blur of blue …”
“She told her husband that she was tired of pretending to be smart. She had been undone since the surgery, her thoughts short circuiting all over the place after twenty minutes of thinking.”
“See the cracks in our foundations? / But Sharon isn’t worried about that. / Tonight, and every night: Who will feed the feral cats — / her front step is lined with aluminum bowls …”