A Woman Looks Over Her Shoulder BoatBrynja Hjlmsdttir (trans. Rachel Britton) In A Woman Looks Over Her Shoulder, written by contemporary Icelandic poet Brynja Hjlmsdttir and translated by Rachel Britton, one woman lives in a glass ball that is being shaken by someone else. This book of poems, however, is always shaking itself up, leaping between the extreme and the daily, the gross and the delicious, between being scared and being scary. These surreal, visceral, and somehow polite
hordes of wild cats
It is a book of four long poems that explore the radical possibilities of language through a generous
These he addressed to Gisèle as an ongoing
Twenty-Four Hours is a remarkable prose poem meditating on time
It includes all of his best known poems including 'The Negro Speaks of Rivers'
He believed that the poet was a “radio” able to collect transmissions from an “invisible world
I don’t know when most of the poems in Lifeguard were written: I guess over the past twenty years
Wrestling with the mind of war
Shaka Zulu (1787-1828)
and insight into the iniquitous social conditions of the global present
de richting is richting omleiding is een weefsel van hoopvolle brokken
filial fractures and sexual reckonings occur