Michael Dumanis and Franny Choi Reading at Northshire Bookstore

Friday, Sep 22 2023, 6:00 PM - 7:00 PM, Off campus (see description), Free

Friday, Sep 22 2023 6:00 PM Friday, Sep 22 2023 7:00 PM America/New_York Michael Dumanis and Franny Choi Reading at Northshire Bookstore Faculty members Michael Dumanis and Franny Choi will read from their latest collections, Creature and The World Keeps Ending, and the World Goes On. Off campus (see description) Bennington College

Choi and Dumanis book covers

Faculty members Michael Dumanis and Franny Choi will read from their latest collections, Creature and The World Keeps Ending, and the World Goes On at Northshire Bookstore in Manchester, Vermont on Friday, September 22 at 6:00 PM. 

About the Books

Creature

by Michael Dumanis

Creature is a complex poetics of vitality, and it immaculately cleaves: even as it underscores how living in an inherently inhospitable environment will dispossess us of the world and one another, making animal of man, it sutures the rent evolutionary tree, glorifying the interdependence of each extant thing. Michael Dumanis expertly cultivates the multiplicity of language and makes of “creature” a marvelous contronym; we are a creature as in a beast, debased, beholden to nature, and we are creature as in an extension of creation, improbably sentient, mortal, here. In “Autobiography,” the speaker attests to the contradiction at the root of cognizance: “Am, as an animal, // anxious. Appendages always aflutter, / am an amazing accident: alive.” How does the human mammal embody both and neither — communal and itinerant, leaving home to approach it, as an immigrant and a geographic nomad, as someone’s child and another’s parent, as being and thing? How do we negotiate our ouroboric identities while attuned to not just our own fragility, but an impending global extinction event? The answer is the absence of answer. “In the beginning, I thought a great deal / about death and sunlight, et cetera,” Dumanis admits in “Squalor,” but “The Double Dream of Spring” absolves us of outsmarting impermanence. “O what a ball I had, spending the days.” And what should we do in this vernal brevity but exhaust it? We each only have so long to trace our hand “over the stony bones / that, fused together, hold [our] only face.”

Description from Northshire Bookstore site

The World Keeps Ending, and the World Goes On

by Franny Choi

Many have called our time dystopian. But The World Keeps Ending, and the World Goes On reminds us that apocalypse has already come in myriad ways for marginalized peoples.

With lyric and tonal dexterity, these poems spin backwards and forwards in time--from Korean comfort women during World War II, to the precipice of climate crisis, to children wandering a museum in the future. These poems explore narrative distances and queer linearity, investigating on microscopic scales before soaring towards the universal. As she wrestles with the daily griefs and distances of this apocalyptic world, Choi also imagines what togetherness--between Black and Asian and other marginalized communities, between living organisms, between children of calamity and conquest--could look like. Bringing together Choi's signature speculative imagination with even greater musicality than her previous work, The World Keeps Ending, and the World Goes On ultimately charts new paths toward hope in the aftermaths, and visions for our collective survival. 

- Description from Northshire Bookstore site