Услышишь гром и вспомнишь обо мне,
Подумаешь: она грозы желала…
–– Анна Ахматова
You will hear thunder and remember me,
and think: she wished for storms…
–– Anna Akhmatova
Julia Kolchinsky Dasbach came to the United States as a Jewish refugee in 1993, from Dnipro, Ukraine, and grew up in the DC metro area suburb of Rockville, Maryland. She spent three years in Eugene, earning an MFA in Poetry from the University of Oregon. She earned a Ph.D in Comparative Literature and Literary Theory from the University of Pennsylvania for her dissertation, Lyric Witness: Intergenerational (Re)collection of the Holocaust in Contemporary American Poetry, which pays particular attention to the underrepresented atrocity in the former Soviet territories. She is the founder and host of Words Together, Worlds Apart, a virtual poetry reading series born out of pandemic but meant to outlast it.
Julia's newest collection, 40 WEEKS will be out in April and available for preorder through YesYes Books. She is also the author of The Many Names for Mother, selected by Ellen Bass as the winner of the 2018 Stan and Tom Wick Poetry prize and finalist for the Jewish Book Award. Her second collection, Don’t Touch the Bones won the 2019 Idaho Poetry Prize and is available from Lost Horse Press and perhaps your local book store. You can find her poems in POETRY, American Poetry Review, and The Nation, among others.
She is Assistant Professor and Murphy Fellow in Creative Writing at Hendrix College and lives in Little Rock, Arkansas with her family.
LATEST NEWS
PREORDER your copy of 40 WEEKS from YesYes Books! Be the first to get it in April.
ORDER signed copies of The Many Names for Mother (2019), Don’t Touch the Bones (2020), and The Bear Who ate the Stars (2013, Out of Print) - ALL PROCEEDS go towards Ukraine and her people.
Watch Voices for Ukraine a reading organized in collaboration with Olga Livshin, featuring poets & translators from Ukraine reading to a zoom audience of more than 800 listeners amid a war.
Read "Mir in Ukraine" in Rattle Poets Respond.
Read "The Past Doesn't Rise Like Smoke" in Nashville Review.