Dana Levin's Now Do You Know Where You Are Reviewed by Srikanth Reddy "Now Do You Know Where You Are is a book about many things—Donald Trump, climate grief, the Covid pandemic, the death of a cat—but it's also the diary of a poet's painful passage from not writing to writing again. Levin freely shares the self-doubts, false starts and dead ends of her return to poetry in this unguarded literary experiment. If this sounds emotionally risky and artistically gutsy, it is." via THE NEW YORK TIMES |
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What Sparks Poetry: Adam Dickinson (St. Catharines, Ontario) on Ecopoetry Now "My poem responds to dioxin in part by reflecting on the complex history of the chemical as well as my own potential exposure history. I spent a significant portion of my life living and traveling in central and northern Ontario, Canada, never far from pulp and paper mills and their distinctive sulfurous smell and insidious environmental footprint." |
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