Still Dancing
Poets & Writers Magazine|March - April 2019

Fifteen Years In The Making, Ilya Kaminsky’s Deaf Republic, Published This Month By Graywolf Press, Is A Dramatic Masterwork, A Parable-in-poems That Confronts The Darkness Of War And Terror With The Blazing Light Of “a Poet In Love With The World.”

Garth Greenwell
Still Dancing

I FIRST met Ilya Kaminsky more than two decades ago, when we were both undergraduates. Even before the publication of his first very beautiful book, Dancing in Odessa (Tupelo Press, 2004), Ilya’s brilliance was unmistakable. He was different from anyone I had ever met, in the breadth of his knowledge of the poetic canon across time and languages, in the intensity of his commitment to poetry as something more than an art, as a kind of unifying principle of existence. Shortly after Ilya published Dancing in Odessa, he began circulating among his friends a new manuscript, a kind of parable-in-poems about a country whose inhabitants suddenly go deaf, refusing to hear the authorities. Ilya produced version after version of this project, eventually titled Deaf Republic, over more than a decade, while editing anthologies and publishing translations, until it acquired a nearly legendary status among his fellow poets. Graywolf will publish it in early March.

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