CAT champions literary translation: @TwoLinesPress, Poetry Inside Out, and the Two Voices event series.
This season at @TwoLinesPress saw the release of 3 new books— Visible: Text + Image, Hugs & Cuddles, and Days Come & Go— each one a world unto itself. Read below to learn more about each one, plus more on recent reviews, readings, and author discussions. https://t.co/aCjKpzburZ
Award-winning, critically acclaimed literature in translation.
👁️ VISIBLE 👁️ features work from: –@ambliopia, tr. Christina MacSweeney –Marie NDiaye, tr. Victoria Baena –Yi SangWoo, tr. Emily Yae Won –@mironesdepalo, tr. @robin_ep_myers –Monika Sznajderman, tr. Scotia Gilroy –Monchoachi, tr. Eric Fishman
"An eccentric collection of hybrid marvels--poems, fiction, and essays in translation, combined with altered and documentary photographs, graphics, and even mud drawings--that idiosyncratically explore how memory captures the visual, and vice versa. It is appropriate that a collection of multifarious works translated from many languages--Spanish, French, Korean, Polish--concerns cross-translation from the visual to the logocentric, and back again. Seeing is believing...that there are many ways to see." --Hyperallergic
"I've loved the Calico series from Two Lines Press since its inception. Individually [the pieces] are striking but as a whole, the collection is revelatory. Each image, each word, and the spaces between them, are endlessly fascinating." --Pierce Alquist, Bookriot
"Visible approaches translation as an act that occurs not only between languages but also between media and disciplines...Thoughtfully curated...Past and present come together in a refreshingly collaborative spirit." --Brooklyn Rail
PRAISE FOR THE CALICO SERIES"By turns cryptic and revealing, phantasmagorical and straightforward, these tales balance reality and fantasy on the edge of a knife." --Publishers Weekly, *starred review* of That We May Live: Speculative Chinese Fiction"Unbelievably exciting...These are poems to read and reread, repeating the lines as though they were a secret between yourself and the page." --The Paris Review on Home: New Arabic Poems"Essential, a gift that opens up the pleasures of new worlds." --Hugh Raffles on Elemental: Earth Stories"This eclectic bilingual anthology from queer Brazilian writers, both living and dead, is as expansive and full of life as the country itself...enticing and poignant." --Publishers Weekly on Cuíer: Queer Brazil