Dunya Mikhail is a woman who speaks like the disillusioned goddesses of Babylon.--Etel Adnan
Here is the new Iraqi poetry.--Pierre Joris
Mikhail's style maintains an impressive fragility and delicacy of image that touches the reader's heart...-- "American Poetry Review"
Mikhail sings of the longing and undoing of exile, mourns the loss of her language, describes its gendering and the re-engineering on her tongue, a poet's most important muscle. Delicate, beautiful, day-stopping.-- "John Freeman, LitHub"
Dunya Mikhail, an Iraqi exile and one of the foremost poets of our time, captures the idiosyncratic grace of the world around her, showing herself an acute observer of its oddities and beauty.--Elizabeth Toohey "The Christian Science Monitor"
In Her Feminine Sign is a collection of limpid meditations which demand that we pause as we read. Their stillness and clarity is no miniaturised charm. Instead it's an utterly articulate clear-sightedness that lets each one deliver a shock. The tragedies of recent and not so recent Iraqi history and the traditions of Arabic verse are the steely structures that underpin her profoundly thought-through work of witness.--Fiona Sampson "The Guardian" (9/14/2019 12:00:00 AM)
"Rare and powerful: Mikhail has created a searing portrait of courage, humanity and savagery, told in a mosaic of voices. Her gifts as a poet infuse these narratives with unexpected beauty."--Deborah Campbell "The New York Times"
Throughout this newest collection, Dunya Mikhail writes poems of cities, friends, grandmothers, goddesses, of girls who might 'outgrow / their dresses / while on the road' to captivity. The poems offer a chronicle of internal life in the landscapes of exile and remembered homeland, always foregrounding the experiences of women. Fossils are reanimated and birds flit between the pages, answering the silences and laments of the various speakers. Beyond the reductive trope of 'witness' often inaccurately assigned to writers whose lives unfold in times of war, Mikhail's poems embody the world that necessitates her work, seamlessly navigating eras and continents. These are not poems about war or exile or trauma. They are poems that emanate from the women who live them, those who survive and those who are remembered.--Lena Khalaf Tuffaha "World Literature Today"
With plain-spoken clarity, these poems navigate the meaning of home. 'How many departures can you put up with?' one asks.-- "The New York Times "New & Noteworthy"" (8/20/2019 12:00:00 AM)
"The dead have words, because Mikhail has written them. Read In Her Feminine Sign to learn from someone who survived and escaped a culture of cruelty, made much worse by American arrogance and idiocy, in Iraq. Read it to face the reality of the United States's own culture of cruelty, of caged children and other savagery. In Her Feminine Sign is as vital in every sense of the word as the strongest literary witnessing I have had the privilege of reading this year."--Barbara Berman "The Rumpus" (5/24/2019 12:00:00 AM)