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Meet Our New Author: Jehanne Dubrow


Coming soon from Diode Editions, American Samizdat, a full-length collection by Jehanne Dubrow, winner of the 2018 Diode Editions Book Contest.

Imagine a United States in which the First Amendment no longer exists. What would we say? What kind of poems would we read and write? In a series of terrified, lyrical fragments, American Samizdat contemplates this possibility. The Polish poets who wrote under the censoring eye of Communism serve as models for the collection. Throughout American Samizdat, an anonymous speaker agonizes over questions of freedom, truth, and the resilience of democracy; she is the American version of Pan Cogito, Zbigniew Herbert’s poetic alter ego, who once critiqued an oppressive regime through the coded language of myth, fable, and fairytale. Set in a world of 24-hour news coverage, social media, and alternative facts, American Samizdat wonders what we've become and where we're going.


Jehanne Dubrow credit: Cedric Terrell

JEHANNE DUBROW is the author of six books of poetry, including most recently Dots & Dashes, winner of the Crab Orchard Series in Poetry Open Competition Award (Southern Illinois University Press, 2017). Her previous books are The Arranged Marriage (University of New Mexico Press, 2015), Red Army Red (Northwestern University Press, 2012), Stateside (Northwestern University Press, 2010), From the Fever-World (WWPH, 2010), and The Hardship Post (three candles press, 2009, Sundress Publications, 2013). She has co-edited two anthologies, The Book of Scented Things: 100 Contemporary Poems about Perfume (Literary House Press, 2016) and Still Life with Poem: Contemporary Natures Mortes in Verse (Literary House Press, 2014). Her first book of creative nonfiction, throughsmoke: an essay in notes, will be published by New Rivers Press in 2019. And her seventh poetry collection, American Samizdat, was one of the winners of the Diode Editions Book Contest and will be published in 2019.

Jehanne’s poetry, nonfiction, and book reviews have appeared in Southern Review, Pleiades, The New York Times Magazine, Southwest Review, The New England Review, as well as on Poetry Daily, Verse Daily, and American Life in Poetry. She earned a B.A. in the “Great Books” from St. John’s College, an MFA from the University of Maryland, and a PhD from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. She has been a recipient of the Alice Fay Di Castagnola Award, the Adrienne Rich Award for Poetry, the Towson University Prize for Literature, an Individual Artist’s Award from the Maryland State Arts Council, a Walter E. Dakin Fellowship and a Howard Nemerov from the Sewanee Writers’ Conference, and a Sosland Foundation Fellowship from the Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies.

The daughter of American diplomats, Jehanne was born in Italy and grew up in Yugoslavia, Zaire, Poland, Belgium, Austria, and the United States. She lives in Denton with her Bedlington Terrier, Lola, and occasionally with her husband, Jeremy, who is a career military officer. Jehanne is an Associate Professor of creative writing at the University of North Texas.

 

American Samizdat is forthcoming in March 2019. Until then, visit her website jehannedubrow.com for a full catalog of her work. Some of Jehanne’s poems have recently been published or are forthcoming in Beloit Poetry Journal, Bennington Review, Birmingham Poetry Review, Cimarron Review, Evansville Review, Love’s Executive Order, North American Review, Shenandoah, and American Life in Poetry. Jehanne is scheduled to be on two panels at the next Association of Writers & Writing Programs conference in Portland, where American Samizdat is scheduled to launch. Follow AWP programming for more information on her panels entitled, "Holocaust Poetics: Writing the traumatized Past and Present" and "Poetic-Traumatic Stress Disorders: Languages of Healing."


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