2.4.18
Description
In these radiant destabilizations of language, Dan Kaplan's 2.4.18 sizzles within the lineage of extraction books like Annie Dillard's Mornings Like This, Mary Ruefle's A Little White Shadow, and Srikanth Reddy's Voyager.
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Reviews
In these radiant destabilizations of language, Dan Kaplan's 2.4.18 sizzles within the lineage of extraction books like Annie Dillard's Mornings Like This, Mary Ruefle's A Little White Shadow, and Srikanth Reddy's Voyager. Pivoting on language strangeness-from "sun-roasted" to "snow brief"-Kaplan's erasures shift and surprise, asking us to "re-see" text and its multi-layered meanings. The poems' sonic laddering keeps rippling outward into the vividness of "blue coastal fields" and "two parrots printed in red ink" to the kinesis of "the wave was starting / at the house party." Kaplan's book is the brilliant oddball at the party who shows up donned in a "costume of bubbles" inquiring about the "geometry of a wing." It's the person you keep conversing with long after the party's over.
-Simone Muench
This book begs many questions. What is a poetic voice? Is it a cut-up sensibility? Does it try to salvage a random day of reportage from oblivion? Is 2.4.18 as promising as any other day? What is news that stays news in our Anthropocene? Please then, every lyrical consideration for these momentary stays against confusion.
-Timothy Liu
I recommend this book to anyone who reads the news, or simply scrolls through it, as I do most mornings, seeking glimmers of hope among the ruins. Line after lean and loaded line, these poems remind me that even within the most rigidly codified form of public discourse, "it's possible to live in a basic field of wow."
-Suzanne Buffam