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Now Do You Know Where You Are

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Levin's luminous latest reckons with the disorientation of contemporary America. . . . Through the fog of doubt, Levin summons ferocious intellect and musters hard-won clairvoyance."—Publishers Weekly, starred review

Dana Levin's fifth collection is a brave and perceptive companion, walking with the reader through the disorientations of personal and collective transformation. Now Do You Know Where You Are investigates how great change calls the soul out of the old lyric, "to be a messenger―to record whatever wanted to stream through." Levin works in a variety of forms, calling on beloveds and ancestors, great thinkers and religions―convened by Levin's own spun-of-light wisdom and intellectual hospitality―balancing clear-eyed forensics of the past with vatic knowledge of the future. "So many bodies a soul has to press through: personal, familial, regional, national, global, planetary, cosmic― // 'Now do you know where you are?'"

"Dana Levin is the modern-day master of the em-dash."—New York Times Magazine

"The book weaves in and out of prose, and it's no wonder that the haibun is the generative form in these pages. A form invented by Basho so that he could move from the prose of his travelogues to the quick intensities of haiku, back and forth. Emily Dickinson does the same thing in her letters. And because this is a poet of the western United States—born outside of Los Angeles and raised in the Mojave, then two decades in Santa Fe, now in middle America, St. Louis—maybe it's right to think of her work in terms of storm clouds: if the prose is an anvil cloud, the flash of poetry at the end is lightning."—Jesse Nathan, McSweeney's

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from March 21, 2022
      Written between the dawn and dusk of the Trump presidency, Levin’s luminous latest (after Banana Palace) reckons with the disorientation of contemporary America. In these poems, things are falling apart: “Metabolic system, financial system, political system, ecosystem—/ And everywhere the oracular feint of a joke future.” These poems oscillate between hope and despair: “Maybe,” Levin writes, “was about all that I could muster––on the question of whether this world.../ will flourish.” Through the fog of doubt, Levin summons ferocious intellect and musters hard-won clairvoyance. From telling the story of her own birth, to her sessions with an osteopath who calls himself an “Incarnation Specialist,” to grief over putting down a beloved cat, to her reflections on the history of the world––“every empire that ever/ rose and fell spread out on discs like/ records spinning—all playing the same song”—she writes with profound self-awareness, spinning experience into meditations on how to exist. The answer is uncertain, but this terrific book will ground readers in the art of questioning, even as the ground quakes.

    • Library Journal

      November 18, 2022

      "Thinking again, as I always do, about body and soul.// ...How painful it was! To be// such a split creature," muses Whiting/Jaffee honoree Levin (Sky Burial) in the opening poem of this brave new collection, demonstrating her gift for adroitly considering the big questions. Yet whether she's contemplating mortality, misogyny, social struggle, or time's relentless passage, Levin anchors her discussion with a down-to-earth sensibility. "Coffee with some old students. Talking about Fame, Ambition's glitzy paramour," she says offhandedly, elsewhere murmuring, "And suddenly--I could see them!--every empire that ever/ rose and fell spread out discs// across an infinite plane called Absolute Now like/ records spinning." Levin does worry about our fate, with empires crashing, climates degrading ("Five great extinct-/ ions, one in process"), politics scorching us ("Voting backward/ into what/ has already died"), and classes ever stratifying ("Privilege means getting to choose the hour of y(our) doom"), but she takes the long view: "You and death! Lovers who just can't quit. That's how we make the/ future--as change goes viral." VERDICT Even as it lofts us on high to see the warp and weft of the universe and our own troubled place therein, this collection turns out to be a strangely reassuring read. A satisfying work from an accomplished poet.--Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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