"In his new book, Ozone Journal, Balakian masterfully does the things nobody else does—derange history into poetry, make poetry painting, make painting culture, make culture living—and with a historical depth that finds the right experience in language."
— Bruce Smith, author of Devotions
“Balakian is blessed with an eerie ability to connect seemingly unrelated events separated by vast amounts of time and space. . . . Balakian’s work is one of contrasts: the contrast between day and night, earth and sky, love and hate, the temporary and eternal, between inner war and outer peace.”
— Alexander Oliver, The Literary Review
“While Balakian’s essays [Vise and Shadow] reveal the ways history and its discontents inscribe themselves in the smallest features of familiar texts, his poems [Ozone Journal] offer a mournful silence in the face of these social upheavals, and their aftermath, that is only possible within the realm of art. Readers will find both texts equally necessary and equally moving.”
— Kristina Marie Darling, Colorado Review
“Balakian is a master of—the drifting, split-second mirage, the cinematic dissolve and cross-cut as well as the sculptural, statuesque moment chiseled out of consonant blends and an imagistic, jazzman’s ear for vowels. . . . Beautiful, haunting, plaintive, urgent. In our dying world’s age, these poems legislate a vital comportment to the demands of our shared present, timely and untimely both.”
— Keith Jones, Consequence
Winner
— 2016 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry
"[Ozone Journal] is a mix of intense sensory, even sensual, experience and cerebral force, the verse both meditative and urgent. Balakian’s long lines pick up and draw out thoughts, clauses, notes, in the rhythms of exploratory prose, then snap back at unexpected line-breaks, maintaining a gut-level as well as an intellectual tension."
— Jamie Osborne, PN Review
“Few American poets of the boomer generation have explored the interstices of public and personal history as deeply and urgently as has Balakian, and his significance as a poet of social consciousness is complemented by his work in other genres.”
— David Wojahn, Tikkun
"Distinguished poet Balakian also authored the best-selling The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America’s Response, so it’s no surprise that the 54-section title poem at this book’s heart recalls excavating the bones of Armenian genocide victims in 2009 Syria. But the poem seamlessly shifts to memories of a perfectly rendered New York, of jazz and John Cage, single parenthood and a relative’s death from AIDS, and throughout we see how experiences converge. . . how we are all containers of the past."
— Library Journal
"[Balakian] has . . . an observational superpower to write about the perils of our day that, in one way or another, are either being dismissed, denied or played down."
— Potomac Review
"What Balakian manages so well in tense, intimate passages. . . is slowly, imperceptibly condensing the panorama of history into a series of personal moments, no matter how fleeting. . . . What the reader perceives in the process, gradually but unmistakably, is the cumulatively catastrophic impact of history on that memory."
— Talisman
"The grandchild of survivors of the Armenian genocide, Balakian is a poet with an acute awareness of how easily we forget. Ozone Journal, his latest collection, is a bold and daring book which expands his attention to erasure to the world around him. It examines the loom waste of a violent century which has flung so many populations to new homes and asks, why?"
— The Toronto Star
"Crossing time, space, and cultures, Balakian has created a multidimensional reality and space that belongs to all and none, where the past offers a respite from the present, but only for a fleeting moment."
— Armenian Weekly