For six months during 2015, two poets known for their capacity to create
lyric responses to the complex realities around them, yet poets fully
inscribed in both a western literary tradition and other longer
traditions that have been marginalized, exchanged poems that were in
constant dialogue even as they remained wholly defined and shaped by the
details of their own private and public lives. Kwame Dawes base was flat
prairieland of Lincoln, Nebraska, a mid-American landscape in which he,
a black man, felt at once alien and curiously committed to the
challenges of finding home; and John Kinsella s base was in the wide
open violently beautiful landscape of western Australia, his home
ground, thick with memory and heavy with the language of ecological
change, political ineptitude and artistic defiance. E-mail was the
bridge. These two poets found themselves in the middle of the swirl of
political and social upheavals in their spheres."