Pages

Thursday, December 26, 2019

"Nunataq" by Joan Naviyuk Kane

View this email on a browserForward to a friendSupport Poem-a-Day
December 26, 2019
 

Nunataq

 
Joan Naviyuk Kane
"Nunataq" by Joan Kane

About this Poem

 

"This poem works with the geographical feature of a nunatak (a "lonely peak" or unique protuberance of land) as a metaphor for how something/one with complex features and surfaces might perennate through seemingly obliterative and inevitable forces (climate crises, cancer, colonialism, or divorce, for instance). I started the poem this spring after hiking on nunatat in southcentral Alaska, and finished it this summer after a trip through Resurrection bay on a vessel coincidentally named Nunatak with the writer and translator Jennifer Croft, whose friendship and work continues to inspire and sustain me and my children."
—Joan Naviyuk Kane

 

Joan Naviyuk Kane is the author of seven collections of poetry and prose, most recently Another Bright Departure (CutBank, 2019). She is the Hilles Bush Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University and lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

more-at-poets

Poetry by Kane

 

Another Bright Departure 
(CutBank, 2019)





"Story About a Glacier" by Rodney Gomez

read-more


"Double View of the Adirondacks as Reflected Over Lake Champlain from Waterfront Park" by Major Jackson

read-more





"At the Zen Mountain Monastery" by Rachel Wetzsteon

read-more

December Guest Editor: Paisley Rekdal

 

Thanks to Paisley Rekdal, author of Nightingale (Copper Canyon Press, 2019), who curated Poem-a-Day for this month's weekdays. Read a Q&A with Rekdal about her curatorial approach this month and find out more about our guest editors for the year.

Support Poem-a-Day
 
 

No comments:

Post a Comment