"Word," the "W" poem in my book "The Disordered Alphabet," was one of the last poems I wrote for the collection. It now serves as the book's opening poem. Cintia Santana on "Word" |
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An Interview with Poet Jesse Nathan "I feel as Faulkner did, that the past is never past. Tradition is with us whether we want it to be or not. There's plenty of oppression in the traditions of our species, plenty of bad habit. Things are such a mess right now, and that's partly why. So I think there's a certain undercurrent of suspicion we sometimes have toward the so-called past. But I’m unwilling to cede 'tradition' to the reactionaries." via MCSWEENEY'S |
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What Sparks Poetry: J. Michael Martinez on Reading Prose "'A small disunified theory' constellates from a lyrical response to Leslie Jamison's 'Grand Unified Theory of Female Pain' to a further diagnosis of late-stage capital's easy co-opting of raw moment's bodily musk spill, our meat's revolutionary intensities suddenly dimmed by the weight of brands, these 'names'." |
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