Like much of my work, "Call It In the Air" folds together the fugitive and radical precision of lyrical consciousness and the likewise radically precise—but very different—evidentiary power of documentary. Ed Pavlić on "Call It in the Air" |
|
|
Like Being In Your Head Not Mine: Dara Barrois/Dixon "This is exactly what poetry does. And what these poems do: slow down a conversation so that something more unseen can be named accurately. This conversation is in the presence of us, the readers, and thus a new conversation is created together: droplets of light, and each a kind of infinitude, a galaxy in a multiverse." via BROOKLYN RAIL |
|
|
What Sparks Poetry: Boris Dralyuk on Julia Nemirovskaya's "Verse" "'Verse,' by the Russophone American poet Julia Nemirovskaya (whose surname, it occurs to me, might share an origin with Nemerov’s in the town of Nemyriv, Ukraine), spoke to me straight away, as Julia’s poems always do. I’ve been translating her work for over a decade now, developing a vocabulary in English that isn’t quite mine and isn’t quite hers (how could it be, since she writes in Russian?) but is very much ours." |
|
|
|
|
|
|