Critic Reviews
Great
Based on 3 reviews on
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Easy flowing and elegantly brilliant, the Sherwin Bitsui work “Dissolve” is nearly indescribable, you’ll just have to see for yourself: https://t.co/Qk1c0XwKUC https://t.co/Vfn5pO2uEu
Copper Canyon Press is a nonprofit, independent press which fosters the work of emerging & established poets. We believe poetry is vital to language & living.
Happy Native American Heritage Month! Enjoy @CLMPorg's reading selections to celebrate this month, including DISSOLVE by SHERWIN BITSUI (@SherwinBitsui): https://t.co/RFsAYS5gcT
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A must-read poem: “The Next Sky” by @SherwinBitsui, who has authored three poetry collections - “Dissolve,” “Flood Song,” and “Shapeshift.” https://t.co/vMbjC3hTVP
"The formal integrity of Bitsui's lines enables seamless transitions from the momentary to the timeless, from each disorienting and dazzling idea to the next... Bitsui's exhilarating poetics lay in the blur of time, the slow and sure slide from ghostlike ideas into haunted-looking things, in constant erasure and redrawing: 'No language but its rind / crackling in the past tense.'"-Publishers Weekly
"Sherwin Bitsui sees violent beauty in the American landscape. There are junipers, black ants, axes, and cities dragging their bridges. I can hear Whitman's drums in these poems and I can see Ginsberg's supermarkets. But above all else, there is an indigenous eccentricity, 'a cornfield at the bottom of a sandstone canyon, ' that you will not find anywhere else."-Sherman Alexie
"Bitsui's poetry returns things to their basic elements and voice in a flowing language rife with illuminating images. A great reading experience for those who like serious and innovative poetry."-Library Journal
"[Bitsui's] images oftentimes depict a world-out-of-balance. Indeed, his work struggles with the tension between Diné and English, between the desire to restore a balance with the natural world and the recognition of how ineluctable the forces of twentieth century technology are. In struggling to reconcile these opposing forces, his poems and prose poems enact a personal ceremony."-Arthur Sze
"When one runs across a young poet of incredible ability, it is hard not to pay attention. Sherwin Bitsui is such a poet, and his second book (Flood Song) presents a startling approach to Navajo experience... These untitled sequences of lyrics are disturbing in their familiar beauty and draw the reader into internal states that only a poet of an ancient land could translate into universal understanding."-Bloomsbury Review