Donnalyn Xu Donnalyn Xu i(19501256 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Every Ode to Girlhood Is an Elegy Donnalyn Xu , 2023 single work essay
— Appears in: The Suburban Review , June no. 30 2023;
1 Split Fruit (Citrus Heart) Donnalyn Xu , 2022 single work essay
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , 1 December no. 107 2022;

'Lately, I don’t have any poetry in me. The words are always too thick and ungraspable, or they’re too thin, seeping out of my loosely clenched fingers. I close my hand into a tight fist, wanting to wring this feeling out. Language passes through me, in cloudy shapes I only vaguely recognise as the distance between myself and the rest of the world. I read a quote from a scientist that says I am both a universe of atoms and an atom in the universe. This feels incomprehensible, so I imagine my body as a container waiting to be filled or emptied.' (Introduction)

1 Out of Solace i "we marked June", Donnalyn Xu , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Tell Me Like You Mean It 5 2021;
1 Donnalyn Xu Reviews Take Care by Eunice Andrada Donnalyn Xu , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , December no. 27 2021;

— Review of Take Care Eunice Andrada , 2021 selected work poetry

'How do we give shape to what resists language? How do words move against the body, in dialogue with its silence, its noise? These tangled questions emerge from my reading of Eunice Andrada’s second collection of poems, TAKE CARE, and the writing of this review, which has taken weeks of slow thinking. Like many others, I have found both comfort and discomfort in poetry during a time of immeasurable loss. I leave most things unread, I seek a return to what is comfortable and familiar. In my own work, I attempt poems about windows or flowers; always in the eyeline of where it hurts, but slightly out-of-focus. Yet, TAKE CARE is piercing in a way that cuts through the haze with a deliberate sharpness. Connected through the theme of rape culture as it exists in everyday and institutional scales, these poems do not flirt around the intensity of their subject matter—they demand your recognition, as well as your unease. As Andrada writes in her author’s statement with Giramondo Press, in TAKE CARE she has “attempted to get as close as possible to the hurting bone”. '  (Introduction)

1 Dream Translation i "The speaker of my poems manufactures joy", Donnalyn Xu , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Voiceworks , August no. 123 2021; (p. 20-21)
1 Ode to Woolworths i "After seeing the psychologist, I visit", Donnalyn Xu , 2020 single work poetry
— Appears in: Voiceworks , Summer/Autumn no. 118 2020; (p. 66-67)
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