Review

ELADATL – Sesshu Foster & Arturo Romo

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Experimentation like this can sometimes lead to cold, hollow results, but ELADATL also contains a heart, as well as beautiful passages befitting a scenic balloon ride through a shared dream.

Vormorgen: The Collected Poems – Ernst Toller

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Mathilda Cullen’s translation of Ernst Toller’s poetry is a labor of love, recovering the all-but-forgotten literary legacy of an enigmatic figure

The Dog of Tithwal – Saadat Hasan Manto

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Manto is an outlier, a freakish occurrence at a freakish time in South Asia.

Spring and Autumn Annals – Diane di Prima

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Di Prima’s efforts yield an ethnography of the “Beats,” of New York’s mid-century bohemia, but an ethnography that somehow eschews mythologizing, shorn of mystique, and self-aggrandizement.

Songs to Come for the Salamander – Mark Young

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Since an early age, Young’s “roots” have been embedded in the history, practice, philosophy, figures, and creative outputs of the Surrealist movement.

I Wished – Dennis Cooper

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Cooper is interested not just in the shock value of his stories but also in the aesthetic effects of his fiction’s design and execution

People Love Dead Jews – Dara Horn

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The deep obsession with her book by Jewish audiences has made some cry foul: instead of great books on Judaism and Jewish history we just end up with more and more bestsellers about antisemitism.

Permanent Volta – Rosie Stockton

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Rosie’s poems persist as little gifts of friendship and care in the present.

Rip Tales – Jordan Stein

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In keeping with real pre-Zuck San Francisco spirit, from the Beats to Brautigan to the language poets, give everything you can; withhold anything you want; such is the imperative and prerogative of the artist, whatever the risks, audience and establishment be damned.

The Mill – Bess Brenck Kalischer

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The Mill is a smirking sphinx, packed with wisdom that remains partly obscured by a Magic Eye puzzle of symbolism, fairy tale references, and outer space.