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3Poetry. In BIG-EYED AFRAID, a first book of genuine originality, Erica Dawson turns the mirror held up to nature on herself. Both humorous and heart-wrenching, Dawson balances formal adroitness with a 21st-century colloquial idiom modulating between demotic and mandarin registers, a voice all her own. Employing numerous forms, including the rondeau, ballade, rhyme royal and her own adaptation of the In Memoriam stanza, Dawson elevates the self only to see it combust into pieces of broken character, an arch of introspection signalled by the book's opening and ending series of nickname poems, including Nappyhead, Mommy Dearest, and DrugFace, where contradictions of personal, cultural, and intellectual identities are exposed. In between, Dawson completes the case history, calling on everyone from Freud and Puccini to Rita Hayworth and James Brown while craftily moving between rhyme's mellifluous voice and that of a frighteningly self-effacing honesty: '...search high for your halo and penance / And a murder of crows and your birthday's sentence.' Yet for every stanza spent in Dawson's mind, each page of BIG-EYED AFRAID opens up to face and find shade from reality's 'blue leaded sun burning its shine too strong.'--Mary Jo Salter
Dexterously rhythmic, with punchy rhymes and inventive style, Erica Dawson's poems allow her to sing a truly modern song of her herself and persuade the reader to assume what she assumes with every perfectly placed note along the way. This book is a joy to read. --Contemporary Poetry Review
Erica Dawson is the most exciting younger poet I've seen in years. What drive and verve Even in lines under tight control, she can sound reckless. Her dazzling wit informs poem after poem, making each seem like a stiff drink with a dash of bitters. BIG-EYED AFRAID is a sensational debut. I can't recall finding this much energy between two covers since Ariel.--X. J. Kennedy
Polished but unvarnished, exquisitely alive, the poems in BIG-EYED AFRAID are utterly electrifying. Erica Dawson's is a name to remember, and these are poems you won't forget.--Claire Messud
BIG-EYED AFRAID is a fast-paced, breathlessly witty and illuminating riff on the multiple effects of race, sex, biology and social pressure on who we are and how we see ourselves. Dawson's dazzling rhymes, her perfect pitch for an array of idioms ranging from the smutty to the sacred, and her extraordinary combination of metrical control and jazz-like syntactical elaboration make her work feel at one and the same time chiseled and improvised, traditional and utterly distinct. Brilliantly alert to multiple influences yet irreducibly tied to this particular poet at this particular moment in our collective history, BIG-EYED AFRAID is one of the most compelling and entertaining books of poetry I've read in I don't know how long.--Alan Shapiro
In Erica Dawson's poetry, the themes of love and death are handled with verve and an eager desire to make sense of an American landscape lit by neon and drenched in zinfandel and dior. Dawson's first book and winner of the Anthony Hecht Poetry Prize investigates a modern world mediated by psychiatric drugs, diagnoses, and unabashed carnal cravings... Each poem reveals an effortless control of form combined with an exuberant syntactical playfulness. Few poets this young...are writing (successfully ) in forms such as the ballade, rondeau, rhyme royale, and sestina.--Michelle Y. Burke
The] debut volume of a remarkable talent...Dawson's metrical command and humane outlook offer a multifaceted self always intelligent and engaging.--Ned Balbo