$15.00
By Dan Alter
Dan Alter has published poems widely in journals including Field, Fourteen Hills, Pank, and Zyzzyva. He has been a fellow of the Arad Arts Project, and a finalist for the Rosenberg Award for Poems on the Jewish Experience. He is a member of the Community of Writers at Squaw Valley, and holds an MFA from Saint Mary’s College of California. He lives in Berkeley with his wife and daughter, and makes his living as an electrician.
"“Could I have come from nowhere,” asks this poet, who searches his irretrievable past and mysterious present for meaning. Through gorgeous, ambitious, impeccable lyrics, provisionally and with a deep reverence for mysteries, he finds it again and again. This smart, funny, sad, kind book is an act of salvage, and solidarity, a pleasure to read, a wonderful achievement and a gift to us all." - Matthew Zapruder, author of Why Poetry and Father’s Day
"In My Little Book of Exiles, Dan Alter “gathers all the departure in his arms,” and keeps “peeling layers off the future of his skin.” This debut collection sings in the form of sonnets, the “cant i”, free verse, and prose. Syntax enacts a search and return, performs in arrangement and rearrangement the compositions that scored the poet’s life. The close attention paid to prosodycreates a soundtrack that connects personal and communal narratives of the Jewish Diaspora, recounts travels across Europe and Israel, through familial stories that reflect on labor, the music of Bob Marley and Paul Simon, forefathers and fatherhood. My Little Book of Exiles will make you wonder where you are going, where you’ve been, and from where have you come--and is it possible to go back again." - Arisa White, author of Who's Your Daddy, Augury Books Home Is Where You Queer Your Heart, Foglifter Press Biddy Mason Speaks Up, Heyday Books arisawhite.com
"Dan Alter’s marvelous collection, Exiles, is a book about origins and ends, origins that recede as we approach them, and ends projected into a future out of the deprivations of the present. In this heart wrenching lover’s quarrel with personal and public legacies, Alter’s great achievement is his openness to complication and ambivalence, (see his politically fraught homage to EzraPound), his willingness to admit emotional attachment to what he often intellectually distrusts, and the way the agitated music of his lines enact a sense of the present moment as an unsettled and unsettling effect of an even more unsettled past." - Alan R Shapiro