fire / and water surging on the screen - / since children, metros,
planets, beds, and lovers are / so lightly swept away - I must not even
breathe. Danielle Janess's debut poetry collection resists the erasing
effects of war, nationalism, and forced migration. Following the
speaker's arduous relocation to a twenty-first-century Europe still
etched with the wounds of the past, the poems take on daring forms and
language, becoming theatre, film clips, photographs, and dance, all
embodied by a cast of characters marked by the violence of the last
century. Arrested in Warsaw within the first twenty days of the Second
World War, Janess's maternal grandfather was sent to a Soviet gulag
where he survived for three years before joining the Free Polish Army in
Russia and later the battle of Monte Cassino in the Italian Campaign.
Many of the poems in The Milk of Amnesia grow from the soil of Warsaw
and Berlin, where the poet-speaker catapults herself and her young child
in an effort to locate and unearth their family inheritance. Drawing
from the tradition of poetry of witness, The Milk of Amnesia performs a
visionary resistance, lit with signposts in a charged atmosphere. An
address to our ongoing struggles with historical memory, these poems act
as both artifact of and antidote to our time.