Synopses & Reviews
Poetry. With illustrations by Evan Siegel. "The poems in Merle Bachman's DIORAMA WITH FLEEING FIGURES are intense, visceral and transformative. 'We aren't meant to know so much of the world,' yet the knowing in this poetry is exactly what each of us craves, the 'translation not yet written' that leads us to both question and believe in the depth of human experience"--Colleen Lookingbill.
Synopsis
The poems in 'Diorama with Fleeing Figures' delicately point to devastating historical events. Instead of mounting judgments, the poems accrue power gently, even stealthily. Evoking a language at once lost, familiar, original, and dying, they balance fragments of culture, with a locus of Jewish Eastern Europe, against intimate imagery of the body-the most confused part of the forest.
About the Author
Merle Lyn Bachman started out in Albany, New York, where she first discovered her affinity for languages and poetry. She is the grand-daughter of Yiddish-speaking immigrants who fled Poland and Russia and came to New York around 1912, where they tried (and failed) at chicken farming. In 2000, Etherdome Press published her poetry chapbook, The Opposite of Vanishing. In 2008, Syracuse University Press published her book, Recovering 'Yiddishland': Threshold Moments in American Literature. A combination of literary criticism, translation, and memoir, it is also her dissertation for the Ph.D. in English, which she earned from the State University of New York at Albany. Bachman lived in the San Francisco area for many years before a job drew her to Louisville, Kentucky, where she is currently assistant professor of English at Spalding University and director of its Bachelor of Fine Arts program in Creative Writing. She continues to explore her relationship to Yiddish and her Eastern European roots, and the question of what "home" means, particularly as a non-Zionist Jew.