A collection of twelve formally distinct poems collaboratively written
by Jack Collom and Lyn Hejinian. The two poets began working together in
1992, and over the years they have developed a repertoire of forms and
procedures, all intended to extend the possibilities for invention,
play, and the unfolding of unforeseeable meaning. Both poets embrace
collaborative authorship as a means of challenging aesthetic
preconceptions. In the process, they frequently venture across thematic
limits, discovering unexpected coherences. The poems often give
themselves over to pleasure, but they are governed by the logic of
poetic language and they carry considerable metaphysical depth.
Jack Collom is the author of seventeen small-press books of poetry,
including Red Car Goes By (Tuumba Press, 2001) and two CDs. He spent
the early 1980s in New York, where he taught poetry to children in the
Poets In Public Service and Teachers & Writers programs. In 1980 and
again in 1990 he was awarded a fellowship in poetry by the National
Endowment for the Arts. Collom lives and teaches in Boulder, Colorado.
Published collections of Lyn Hejinian's writing include Writing Is
an Aid to Memory, My Life, and The Language of Inquiry. From 1976
to 1984, Hejinian was the editor of Tuumba Press; she is currently the
co-director of Atelos, a literary project commissioning and publishing
cross-genre work by poets. In the fall of 2000, she was elected the
sixty-sixth fellow of The Academy of American Poets. She teaches at the
University of California, Berkeley.