This book's scattered, honest communications are lyric and concrete and rooted in place, in the body, in violence, in reckoning, and in truth.-- "Orion"
Dark Traffic is masterfully imagined on the page . . . Kane clearly has subject matter within this book, but she's presenting it in a way that doesn't spoon-feed the white gaze. . . . [She] is subverting traditional notions of suffering and voyeurism.-- "Dean Rader and Victoria Chang, Los Angeles Review of Books"
Dark Traffic mourns the disruption and erasure of the Indigenous people and culture of the North. . . . Their history was overrun by ours, and in our history books, largely erased and replaced by ours. . . . This is the landscape that the Inupiaq poet Joan Naviyuk Kane explores in her newest collection.-- "Anchorage Daily News"
A brutal and beautiful book whose poems strain the lyric through concrete and confessional modes, translation, and unforgettable evocations of land and people burdened with--but not defined by--the legacies of colonial atrocity. Dark Traffic is a ravishing achievement--one of our best poets, at the height of her powers.--Melissa Febos, author of Girlhood
Whether by intellect shot through with feeling, or feeling sharp with intellect, Joan Naviyuk Kane's Dark Traffic is a vigorous account of [Cold War] communication systems, complicity, and [self] inquiry. Rich with experimentation and a clear ethic of attentiveness, Dark Traffic is an indomitable, resonant book.--Shara Lessley, author of The Explosive Expert's Wife
Oscillating between presence and absence, mother, daughter, woman, inhabiting the 'rift into language and grit, ' Kane reveals the ways we are made and unmade and made again. Dark Traffic is the poet at her most vulnerable--and most powerful.--Abigail Chabitnoy, author of How to Dress a Fish
Through both her poetry and her prose, Kane writes of and through myth and storytelling, offering a landscape built on narrative itself, a landscape that is still learning how to continue to thrive, or even sustain, despite and through such outside interference, including the ongoing and destructive bludgeon and erasures of American imperialism.--Rob McLennan, author of The Uncertainty Principle