The Light We Cannot See single work   poetry   "We surface abruptly somewhere between"
Issue Details: First known date: 2021... 2021 The Light We Cannot See
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Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Griffith Review States of Mind no. 72 April 2021 21724506 2021 periodical issue

    'IN THE FIRST months of 2020, the vibrations of the Earth changed. As monitored by a global network of seismologists, the average daily displacement of the surface of the planet – measured in nanometres, or increments of one billionth of a metre – fell around the world, from Nepal to Barcelona to Brussels. In Enshi, in China’s Hubei province, and in New York City, average ground displacement fell to less than one nanometre from pre-pandemic levels of 3.25 nm and 1.75 nm respectively'. (Ashley Hay : Introduction) 

    2021
    pg. 213-216

Works about this Work

Transfusions Of Truth and A Far Cry : Devika Brendon Reviews Anne Casey’s ‘The Light We Cannot See’ Devika Brendon , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Rochford Street Review , vol. 32 no. 2 2021;

— Review of The Light We Cannot See Anne Casey , 2021 single work poetry

'My review of this dazzling book has been delayed by my father’s recent death. But the greatest tribute I can give to Anne Casey is to say that reviewing her work has been one of my greatest consolations in the past several weeks. I find myself rereading the poems in this collection several times a day, like a devout person telling their prayer beads. This analogy feels like a natural one: the poems as a whole speak of faith, in human capacity for joy and connection, a reaching for what affirms life, expressed in longing for those things we have lost, and fear losing forever, during the ordeal we are all experiencing as we navigate the enforced separations and prolonged anxieties induced by the ongoing pandemic.'  (Introduction)

Opening the Inner Eye : Anne Casey's 'the light we cannot see' Wendy J. Dunn , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Verity La , September 2021;

— Review of The Light We Cannot See Anne Casey , 2021 single work poetry
Opening the Inner Eye : Anne Casey's 'the light we cannot see' Wendy J. Dunn , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Verity La , September 2021;

— Review of The Light We Cannot See Anne Casey , 2021 single work poetry
Transfusions Of Truth and A Far Cry : Devika Brendon Reviews Anne Casey’s ‘The Light We Cannot See’ Devika Brendon , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: Rochford Street Review , vol. 32 no. 2 2021;

— Review of The Light We Cannot See Anne Casey , 2021 single work poetry

'My review of this dazzling book has been delayed by my father’s recent death. But the greatest tribute I can give to Anne Casey is to say that reviewing her work has been one of my greatest consolations in the past several weeks. I find myself rereading the poems in this collection several times a day, like a devout person telling their prayer beads. This analogy feels like a natural one: the poems as a whole speak of faith, in human capacity for joy and connection, a reaching for what affirms life, expressed in longing for those things we have lost, and fear losing forever, during the ordeal we are all experiencing as we navigate the enforced separations and prolonged anxieties induced by the ongoing pandemic.'  (Introduction)

Last amended 5 May 2021 16:52:28
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