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Sky Ward
Drunk on the sun and the sea, Kazim Ali’s new poems swoop linguistically but ground
themselves vividly in the daily and real. Both imprisoned by endlessness and dependent
on it for nurturing and care, in Sky Ward Ali goes further than ever before in sounding
out the spaces between music and silence, between sky and ocean, between human and
eternal. “Daily I wish stitched here to live,” moans his Prometheus, wondering what
release from familiar bondage might actually portend. “So long liberation,” his Icarus
sings as he plummets from the sky with desperation and grace, ready to unfeather and
plunge into the everything-new. Whether in the extended poem-prayer to Alice Coltrane
or in the “deleted scenes” and “alternate endings” to his critically acclaimed volume
Bright Felon, or in the spirit-infused and multifaceted lyrics he has become known for,
Ali once again reinvents possibilities for the personal lyric and narrative..
“Beautiful, echoing poetry that finds ‘No return home but an eternity of transformation.’
Ali has a delicate touch and these poems leave us (for we are reluctant to leave them)
playing in space.”
—Tracie Morris
“Ali is one of the very few poets now writing dedicated to the enlargement (rather than
the abandonment) of the lyric mode. With these new poems, he has opened a wide, new
space for the music of what happens and shown us a worthy, if challenging, task for that
music.”
—Donald Revell
“In, out, secrecy, exposure. The book is resonant with the poetry of Hafiz and Rumi but
stays grounded in the contemporary, especially in its candor, and unease. But then the
language and vision is also Romantic and pleasurable, calling to be heard aloud.”
—Fanny Howe
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