Living in a Different World Colin Burrow discusses Ilya Kaminsky's Dancing in Odessa and his latest collection, Deaf Republic. Of the latter, he writes, "It’s a sequence of lyrics, arranged as a drama, about events in the fictional town of Vasenka. Soldiers turn up during a puppet show and interrupt it; a deaf boy spits at them; he is shot and the people of the town go (or act) deaf as a form of resistance....It imagines a world in which everyone is complicit in murder." via LONDON REVIEW OF BOOKS |
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What Sparks Poetry: Sally Keith on the Intimacy of the Unspeakable "Living as I do, phone pressed against my body most of the day, it’s strange to me how tragedy, especially, can feel farther and farther away. It’s so easy to vacillate between feeling overly affected and totally numb. How, I keep wondering, did Louise Glück write a poem inside and outside of the massiveness of 9/11, a poem that migrates, necessarily, between the body and the mind, a poem moved by unanswerable questions, in which repetition is as likely to halt as it is to heal?" |
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