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DREAM STATE: A COMMONPLACE BOOK
by Alana Marie Levinson-LaBrosse

The poems of Dream State arise from the poet’s experience living and working in Iraq, not as a soldier or journalist, but as a writer, translator, teacher, and preservationist of Kurdish culture. In a stunning act of cogenerative imagination, Levinson-LaBrosse’s poetic voice emerges alongside the voices of others with whom she has collaborated. Together with her poems, these translated memories, testimonies and stories form an interdependent environment bridging time and perception.

As a book, Dream State resists categorization. And yet it is fundamentally accessible in its humanity. People come together in understanding and break apart just as quickly. Fictions shatter and endure, while national imaginations always seem to be at risk. And everywhere the poet turns, she learns that peace is never self-sustaining. True peace is an enduring act of courage, and one that must be lived everyday.

As the 2003 Iraq invasion reached its twentieth anniversary (2023) and the Islamic State’s attempted genocide in Shingal reaches its tenth (2024), Dream State attempts to sit with other people’s experiences, rather than extract details to exploit them; amplifies the work around the poet, rather than supplant it; and trusts that listening to individual perspectives will lead to common understanding.

Praise for Dream State

"In every page of Dream State one's blood is positively carbonated by a ‘threshold state,’ the evidence and feeling of transition, transformation, like Ovid's characters, ‘I sing of bodies changed.’ People in mid-speech, people caught in between, the slim margin of human expression so robustly detailed, the presence of death and threat and disappointment aligning each person in the book with life more precisely.”

—Katie Peterson, author of Fog and Smoke

"Dream State holds a mirror before those of us who have lived the silences and the songs of Kurdish life. Levinson-LaBrosse stitches together fragments of our history, our grief, and our joy. From villages erased to libraries burned, from mothers who carry love in their hands to poets who speak for the land itself, this book captures what it means to endure and to create despite it all."

—Ava Homa, author of Daughters of Smoke and Fire