We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
twofold
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
-
02 April 2024

The poet Charles Simic wrote, “Short poems: be brief and tell us everything.”
Edward Carson’s extraordinary new work gathers concise diptych – or twofold – poems exploring themes of love, relationships, myth, art, language, math, physics, geometry, and artificial intelligence. Within the two sections of twofold, “dialogues” and “binaries,” the form of the diptych shapes language and meaning as paired poems engage each other across the margins of facing pages. Caroline Bem, author of A Moveable Form, writes: “The diptych, you see, is beautiful. It is symmetry and difference, doubling and mirroring, binarism and seriality. It is the form of paradox, both open and closed, free and contained.”
Negotiating surprising twinning combinations, comparisons, and outcomes, the poems in twofold are lively, thought-provoking, and playful interchanges that are also mischievously literate, questioning, and intuitive.
“Wonderfully intriguing, echoic and fun. With pared-down pairing and whetted wit, Edward Carson’s twofold tiptoes through the twos, crosses and recrosses that ancient border between mischief and wisdom. An agile bicameral ballet.” Don McKay, author of Strike/Slip and Lurch
“The poems of twofold are constructed on a bedrock of two and three-beat lines and from this simple foundation Carson creates a fantastical architecture of music and metaphor. This edifice is cantilevered so each floor seems to float free from the one below. It is like walking daily past your favorite building and being amazed again by its cornerstone and its crenellations.” Ross Leckie, author of The Critique of Pure Reason and Gravity’s Plumb Line
“twofold dazzles in form and content equally. The poems, deft and nimble and deceptively light, don't dialogue with each other so much as they call and respond. They are of two minds, two hearts, about many things, playfully but also with earnest intent, and as a collection they make a beautiful music of complexity and doubt.” Charles Foran, author of Just Once, No More
“twofold imagines all the possibilities of between, from arithmetic ratio to the electric pulse of love throbbing one towards the other across fields of attraction and resistance. These poems build irresistible momentum through the narrow channels of their minimalist chains of words—they are infinitesimal particle accelerators where thought blinks in and out of valences like particles deciding to be waves, waves longing for particulate being. As Edward Carson seems to know so well, we wear ourself out trying to draw near, fold and refold the pleats of our hearts, ultimately yielding to the “undertow / of binary.” Stephen Collis, author of A History of the Theories of Rain