"I am incapable of succinctly praising this poet's immense talent."
--TERRANCE HAYES
Often the most recognized, even brutal, events in American history are
segregated by a politicized, racially divided "Color Line." But how do
we privately experience the most troubling features of American
civilization? Where is the Color Line in the mind, in the body, between
bodies, between human beings?
Selected for the National Poetry Series by Dan Beachy-Quick, Ed Pavlic's
Visiting Hours at the Color Line attempts to complicate this black and
white, straight-line feature of our collective imagination, and to map
its nonlinear, deeply colored timbres and hues. From daring prose poems
to powerful free verse, Pavlic's lines are musically infused, bearing
tones of soul, R & B, and jazz. They link the influence of James Baldwin
with a postmodern consciousness descended from Samuel Beckett, tracking
the experiences of American characters through situations both mundane
and momentous. The resulting poems are intense, ambitious, and
psychological, making Visiting Hours at the Color Line a poetic tour
de force.