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Jessi MacEachern lives in Montreal, QC, where she teaches English literature. Her research has been published in Studies in Canadian Literature/Études en littérature canadienne and CanLit Across Media: Unarchiving the Literary Event. Her poetry has been published in various places, including Poetry Is Dead, Vallum, MuseMedusa, Canthius, PRISM, and CV2.
"A long poem divided into six parts, A Number of Stunning Attacks
plays with storytelling and style in intense, intimate imagery and
stimulating abstract language. MacEachern is precise in her choice
of words as they unfurl down the pages, surrounded by enough white
space to let them move freely as needed – a delight with a greater
purpose."—Robyn Fadden, Montreal Review of Books "There is an
unstable, fragmentary eroticism to MacEachern’s debut collection of
long poems. Reading, I am often stunned by images that glimmer with
innuendo, but can’t be tracked down"—Klara du Plessis, 49th Shelf
"This is a sensual sensory journey and MacEachern writes with a
rhythm that brings the reader into the felt-sense of her world, and
holds us captive there in the stillness of her spaces... In
MacEachern’s text, the spaces between words are as important as the
words themselves. And this, I believe, is the
point. Attacks is worth reading a second time—once as
introduction to a new environment and the second for
the sake of wonder at her immersive World."—Atlantic Books
Today "A smart and stellar debut."—Winnipeg Free Press
“MacEachern’s poetry demands attention to the stunning beauty of
her craft… MacEachern taps into what poetry does best, which is to
bypass logical explanations and dive into an emotional core that
here sings of strength above all.”—Quill & Quire, starred review
"MacEachern's finely honed technique and emotional smarts are
beautifully displayed as she uses intimacy to disorient and
fragmentation to connect, bringing the reader's focus both inward
and outward at once. Fans of Lisa Roberston and Erín Moure will
find lots to love in these pages."—Open Book "Jessi MacEachern’s A
Number of Stunning Attacks is an encounter of flesh and its
edges."—Arc Poetry Magazine "In her amazing debut volume of poetry,
Jessi MacEachern unfolds a panoply of encounters, some at points of
intersection, others at moments of separation. They are uneasily
situated in narratives, but who the subjects are is subject to
interpretation. And to change. A Number of Stunning Attacks is
tantamount to a broad set of disorientations and disturbances,
often unsettling and always generative, for both the poet and the
reader. We might think of this as a poetry of the romantic distance
that always lies between two people, a poetry of lyric
impossibility. The thrill and anguish of that impossibility has
captivated us for thousands of years. It is as ancient as the
poetry of Sappho and as contemporary as the work contained in this
book—a record of the perennial quest to let love be heard and to
make love known."—Lyn Hejinian "By turns drifting and twitchy, the
fragments that comprise MacEachern’s evocative, invigorating first
book lodge under the skin. Like splinters, or shards of brightly
coloured glass, or bones that were always there but you didn’t
recognize them until now. Sometimes they’re broken (sometimes we’re
broken), sometimes they make something whole."—Stephanie Bolster
"In Jessi MacEachern’s spellbinding (and spellblinding) debut,
poems glint like slivers of glass but have the force of shrapnel.
Shards of text, taut with significance, are read as if we are
loosed in dream. MacEachern’s language recalls what Nicole Brossard
says of “the re-invented language,” in which there is “a space for
the existence of the woman subject and her desire… space for her
singularity as well as her plurality.” As one speaker puts it, “our
hearts / Nose a line of light in the dust,” searching for meaning
in a place only few have inhabited. MacEachern bends the light of
words and shines directly into the Brossardian “espace inédit,”
arresting the reader in language’s new, peculiar rays."—Gillian Sze
"In these beautifully built up serial poems, Jessica MacEachern
draws on the elongated language of a remoteness that is not caused
by distance but by an obscured proximity. The depth of feeling
created by that blockage is stretched into poetic events of
dampened intensity that strain at the normal syntax of affect. This
intensity – and its potential—is placed in the city, in
differentiated and gendered bodies, in work, in the home, and in
language. The hook of this book is that it creates the spaces in
thought and perception that close distance."—Jeff Derksen "Jessi
MacEachern’s first book of poetry strikes almost as a journal of
the pronounced interiority all of us are living these days. A
construction of sequences in which each passage on its own is a
feast and lark, its poems unfold small mysteries that are
dangerously calm, exploring intimate relations lived by women in
the space of the house. In the rhythmic arborescence of precise
lyric images, there are no totalities. Self-examining but never
self-absorbed, MacEachern’s poems are saucy and savvy; via a female
gaze onto gender and spacings, they pulse with uneasy but hard-won
life."—Erín Moure "In her debut poetry collection Jessi MacEachern
shows that for a woman to sing with lyric force is to try to
express a thought before the inevitable interruption. How do women
ever get anywhere? A Number of Stunning Attacks is itself a
stunning attack: a winnowing of language as precise as it is
gleaming."—Sina Queyras
*Stephanie Bolster*
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