Solmaz Sharif has published poetry in The New Republic and Poetry, and has received a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers' Award and a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. She is currently a Jones Lecturer at Stanford University.
"[An] excellent debut collection. . . . In Sharif's rendering, Look
is at once a command to see and to grieve the people these words
describe--and also a means of implicating the reader in the
violence delivered upon these people. . . . An artful
lexicographer, Sharif shows us that the diameter of a word is often
as devastating as the diameter of a bomb."--New York Times Book
Review "Sharif's skillful debut collection draws on a Defense
Department lexicon of military terms."--The New York Times Book
Review, Editors' Choice "Remarkable. . . . By turns fierce and
tender, the poems are a searing response to American intervention."
--The New Yorker
"A restless, gorgeous book of poetry."--Jia Tolentino, The New
Yorker Page-Turner "[Sharif's] poetry flicks between lyric and
lexicon while still sounding like music; in her hands, language is
as pliant as warmed wax. . . . It is the central miracle of Look
that Sharif shows us the real intensity of her conceit without
veering into triteness. She is, in turns, icy and searing, but
consistently fierce and beautiful." --NPR.org "Sharif defies power,
silence, and categorization in this stunning suite. . . . In form,
content, and execution, Sharif's debut is arguably the most
noteworthy book of poetry yet about recent U.S.-led wars in
Afghanistan, Iraq, and the greater Middle East."--Publishers Weekly
*Starred Review* "[Sharif] forces you to suspend yourself and
consider your relationship to language really deeply."--NPR, All
Things Considered "A powerful collection of verse. . . . [Sharif]
turns a system of language back onto itself. . . . remarkably
profound."--BOMB Magazine "[Solmaz] Sharif is poised to influence
not only literature but larger conversations about America, war,
and the Middle East."--The Paris Review "[An] impressive debut
collection. . . . Sharif begins to replace what has been displaced,
or to reclaim displacement from official state power. And it
produces a vibrant, dissonant poetry that refuses to calcify."
--Boston Review "An urgent collection. . . . [Sharif's poems] work
at the more radical aim of challenging the reader's complacency. .
. . [They] demand witness."--Bookforum "A brilliant dive into how
war affects people and language. . . . In the vein of Claudia
Rankine's Citizen, Look is, at its core, a political call to
attention: If we are to combat the effects of war on people and
language, we must first understand how war permeates our society
and culture. To this end, Look is not only relevant, but eye
opening."--The Los Angeles Review "Astonishing. . . . [Sharif is] a
formidable poetic talent. . . . Sharif casts the light of her
imagination into the world's darkest places."--San Francisco
Chronicle "Look creates an after-image similar to that of Robin
Coste Lewis' National Book Award-winning 2015 debut, Voyage of the
Sable Venus, with its meditation on the long aftermath of slavery
and diaspora. Like that book, Look feels like a disassembled museum
exhibit with the occluded stories -- the ones not told -- written
into view. Look, it compels you to do, and you will."--Los Angeles
Times "Though this is her first book, Look displays none of the
hesitations of a debut writer. Sharif is in command of her
abilities, the book at once complete and unified, but varied in
subject, tone, and form. It's a distinguished
introduction."--Literary Hub "[Sharif] closes the distance between
the trigger and the wounded, between language and the body. She
makes it impossible to look away."--The Margins "Look is a book
that disrupts, fervently and effectively. The poems within are
allergic to complacency and linguistic hypnosis; they constantly
reach, inquire, prod, and wonder--sometimes with force--and refuse
to allow the reader to be lulled into the sense that everything is
okay in the world."--The Rumpus "Sharif's writing is sparkling,
precise, subtle, artful, and true. . . . Through the fine
achievement of Look, Solmaz Sharif gives us the gift of her
unflinching gaze."--Kenyon Review Online "Words can be powerful and
Sharif uses them to their full potential. . . . This is a brilliant
book of poetry."--MuslimGirl "An important corrective against the
weaponised rhetoric we now confront daily in the media and in our
personal lives."--The Poetry School "Look is surprisingly tender
for a book of such ferocious poetry. . . . A deeply human attempt
to rewrite the vocabulary of war."--Vox "Sharif's Look is
ambitious, intelligent, moving, important, and a little
dangerous."--Drunken Odyssey "Sharif has been deeply and
irreparably impacted by war and injustice, and she is deft at
modulating her voice in this collection, scaling between broad,
abstract critique and deeply intimate reflection."--Fourth &
Sycamore "Creating poetry that is beautiful is hard, and so is
creating poetry that is socially important. Poets who manage to do
both simultaneously are treasures. In Look, Sharif provocatively
turns the veiled, euphemistic language of the American war machine
against itself by crafting poetry from words and lines in the
United States Department of Defense's Dictionary of Military and
Associated Terms. The result is profound, at points humorous, and
sobering."--Fourth & Sycamore, Best Books of 2016 "Raw, unsparing
poems. . . . Highly recommended."--Library Journal *Starred Review*
"A complicated, commanding account of contemporary American life. .
. . The poems in Look shift between clear-eyed description and
exhausting wariness, painful in their honest assessment of the
destruction caused by our present conflicts and ways of being. . .
. Look has been published just when it is most needed. . . . The
work [these poems] do is utterly necessary. . . . To see another
person's humanness: Look calls us back to this most simple, this
most essential task."--Harvard Review "There are few books, whether
debuts or not, to more anticipated than the publication of Solmaz
Sharif's Look.--Literary Hub "Sharif's work transcends the standard
tropes of political poetry. Neither didactic nor angry, her poems
delicately balance sadness and loss, anxiety and fear and hope and
humor. . . . Illuminating and heartbreaking, Look demands that the
reader pay attention to their own relationship with the adopted,
euphemistic language of power, politics and destruction."--Spectrum
Culture "Look explores the myriad ways how we go to war today
reverberates through communities and states and across the world --
taking a critical stance against the way humans wage war against
other countries, wage war with ourselves, and even wage war against
our own language and means of expressing (or not) the inherent
truths about our lives. . . . Intimate and haunting."--Bustle
"Sharif's poems are rich with imagery; a single line of hers can
tell an entire story."--Huffington Post "As heart-wrenching as they
are intriguing, these highly anticipated poems are beautifully
devastating."--BookTrib "Look achieves Wallace Stevens' critical
standard of poetry by deftly responding to the true spirit of the
time in which it is written. . . . [Look] is no ordinary book. . .
. Crossing into such volatile aesthetic terrain charged with a
radical decadence, this collection threatens even the relevance of
such superlatives with obliteration. Quite possibly, it deserves to
be called dangerous."--Colorado Review "Urgent, prophetic, and
virtuosic. . . . [Sharif] rages against the dull machine of war by
turning its weapons against it--into poems with which she hopes to
provoke a sleeping community out of its 'learned
helplessness.'"--The The Poetry "There is so much here that
compels. . . . Sharif's collection activates the role of observer
by stunning back into awareness the wounds that still suppurate,
lighting the holes cut from language and their respective tears in
American thinking."--The Lit Pub "Look demonstrates not only that
language is an integral part of the military arsenal but also that
poetry remains a subversive act, arefusal to submit to despair or
amnesia."--The Critical Flame "Look opens the way for a new
internationalist regard in American poetry. . . . Solmaz Sharif has
produced an extraordinary and vital work of poetry."--Puritan
Magazine "Solmaz Sharif's Look is something great. She throws us a
brilliant, even perfect, book of poems sadly central to the
nightmare of today."--Eileen Myles "By unearthing, decoding, and
reconstructing half-hidden symbols of power built into nomenclature
as well as everyday expression, the poet serves truth--sometimes
delicately, other times brutally. . . . Each phrase pulls the
reader into a system of being, personal and historical, and Look,
line by line, extends toward prophecy and ('I am singing to her
still') harmony." --Yusef Komunyakaa "Solmaz Sharif's beautiful and
important poems patrol the boundaries and limits of language. . . .
I can't remember a more distinguished debut."--Eavan Boland "I
haven't been as excited about a first book of poetry for a long
time as I am about Solmaz Sharif's forthcoming Look. . . . This
feels like an important book, not just a good one."--David Baker
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