Nothing Remembers by Michael Dickel

(3 customer reviews)

$19.99

 

Michael Dickel’s title, Nothing Remembers, raises the question of whether the past can be preserved in memory, or whether memory is most effective in the face of loss. Either way, what does the past leave us, who are we with or without the past, and if poetry can occasionally fill gaps in our present, what if anything can it give us of our past? Is poetry anything at all — or is it nothing at all, and is the nothing of poetry the best memorialization? Dickel’s sensory, sensual, musical lyric roves across wet and dry landscapes, food and drink, family and friends, darkness and light, sleep and wakefulness, dreams and reality. His words hover between his homes in the Mideast and the American Midwest, conveying the fragility of present and past, enacting a memory at high risk of loss, maintaining faith against staggering odds. Nothing Remembers is a dream of peace, the peace that may come if and when persons and peoples live in a present comfortable with close and distant memory.

–Hassan Melechy, author of Kerouac: Language, Poetics, and Territory  (Bloomsbury) and A Modest Apocalypse (Eyewear)

 

Michael Dickel combines powerful imagery and poetic beauty with a reality beneath life’s skin, that will gently shake the reader into an awareness, refreshing and engaging. He will take you through his pages to a ‘resting state’ where possibilities in your mind will feel endless.

–Silva Merjanian, author of Life and Legends

 

Between knowing and dreaming, shattered screams, pulses, shadows and longing, Michael Dickel’s arresting fourth collection, Nothing Remembers, navigates an erotics of re-membrance renegotiating a Proustian ethos of things resonant, prescient, and the ghostly revenance of hope.

–Adeena Karasick, author of Salomé: Woman of Valor

 

“I know so many wildly talented writers. It is one of the great privileges in my life. Michael Dickel is one of them: he uses language like layers of color in a complex painting — you can access experiences that you otherwise wouldn’t have. I’ve just preordered his upcoming collection, Nothing Remembers, from Finishing Line Press; poetry lovers, this is worth having.” 

–Ina Roy-Faderman, author of 56 Days of August: an anthology of postcard poems

 

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLqieM8FKYyXh3dly_S_qsqftPUvb-BhoC

 

 

 

 

 

 

Description

Nothing Remembers

by Michael Dickel

$19.99, Full-length, paper

978-1-64662-012-8

2019

Michael Dickel’s writing and art appear in print and online. His poetry has won international awards and been translated into several languages. His latest poetry collection, Nothing Remembers, will be out from Finishing Line Press summer 2019. A poetry chapbook, Breakfast at the End of Capitalism, came out in 2017 (Locofo Chaps, Illinois). His flash fiction collection, The Palm Reading after The Toad’s Garden, came out in 2016 from Is a Rose Press. Previous books include: War Surrounds Us (Is a Rose Press), Midwest / Mid-East (Lulu), and The World Behind It, Chaos…(WV? eBook Press). He co-edited Voices Israel Volume 36, was managing editor for arc-23 and 24, and is a past-chair of the Israel Association of Writers in English. He is a contributing editor of The BeZine (TheBeZine.com). With Israeli producer / director David Fisher, he received a U.S.A. National Endowment of the Humanities documentary-film development grant through their Bridging Cultures program and wrote a prospective script about Yiddish Theatre.

3 reviews for Nothing Remembers by Michael Dickel

  1. michael_dickel (verified owner)

    In his latest collection, Nothing Remembers (Finishing Line Press, August 2019), American-Israeli poet, writer, songwriter, photographer and artist (also husband, dad, teacher), Michael Dickel takes us with him on a wide exploration of our world in all our recollections and amnesias, a distant contemporary relative of A la recherché du temps (In Search of Lost Time/Proust). It is rather noble in its observations, I think, calling us to the domain of our questions and sacred imagination, exploring the place of memory, re-visioning, and of human activity and perception in the varied landscapes of our hearts and souls and this Earth.

    I found Nothing Remembers to be in effect a guided meditation on the vista and meaning of history and culture, personal and communal pathways, and the possible/probable relevance of memory, poetry, and connection: humans and their experiences as part of nature, as geologic memory, as archives of history. Recommended without reservation.

  2. michael_dickel (verified owner)

  3. michael_dickel (verified owner)

    Here is a YouTube playlist of Michael Dickel (me) reading poems (and an interview)—it includes the title poem from this collection. https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLqieM8FKYyXh3dly_S_qsqftPUvb-BhoC

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