One More Thing: Shelley Wong and Lisa Low in Conversation
“Tonally, in this book, I was interested in ambivalence, in quiet moments of contradiction.”
“Tonally, in this book, I was interested in ambivalence, in quiet moments of contradiction.”
“They’re talking about real stuff, and sometimes it’s funny and sometimes you’re not sure you should be laughing, and poetry also so often lives in that same kind of in-between, uncomfortable space.”
Summer, at once, a field of violated water, or:
the violet energy of bruises.
“I began to feel an urgency, not only in the theoretical power of poetry but in our collective power as poets.”