front cover of American Parables
American Parables
Daniel Khalastchi
University of Wisconsin Press, 2021
Daniel Khalastchi's third collection provides an uncompromising exploration into the political and societal disturbances facing America today. Electioneering, lack of affordable health care, the increase in mass shootings, and the continued fight for equal rights are juxtaposed against an unlikely sense of hope and optimism. Lurking behind each page is the ever-present issue of immigration, with specific focus on the escape of the author's father from Iraq and the pressures linked to living as an Arab Jew in the middle of the United States.

Through unnerving gallows humor and radical honesty, these poems redefine the American experience by asking the reader to consider what it means to live in the shadow of a perceived sense of freedom and to have faith when believing feels hopeless. Khalastchi's perspective as an Iraqi Jewish American brings sharp focus to the holistic uncertainties of religion, politics, assimilation, illness, love, and loss—with absurd, visceral, and wry acclaim.
 
 
I type into

the internet your high school
and find rubble. Your daughter

has the flu. We are sick
with disappointment but

everyone is fine.
—Excerpt from "First Generation: Our Escape"
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front cover of Fairy Tale Review, The Green Issue
Fairy Tale Review, The Green Issue
The Green Issue
Kate Bernheimer
University of Alabama Press, 2007

logo for Tupelo Press
Manoleria
Daniel Khalastchi
Tupelo Press, 2011
Winner of the Tupelo Press / Crazyhorse First Book Prize

Under the influence of broadcasts such as public radio’s “Marketplace” (a daily roundup of stock reports and business news), Daniel Khalastchi composed a series of character-driven poems whose recurrent narrator is physically and mentally manipulated while the world around him takes little notice. Through their chaos and horror, these poems ask a reader to question the ways in which our careening healthcare system, crumbling financial/housing/job markets, and war on multiple fronts are actually affecting us — both inside and out.

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front cover of The Story of Your Obstinate Survival
The Story of Your Obstinate Survival
Daniel Khalastchi
University of Wisconsin Press, 2024
Daniel Khalastchi boldly strides across a landscape of smoldering fires, unmarked boxes, and pictures of senators in airplane bathrooms. Exhilarating and innovative, The Story of Your Obstinate Survival collapses genre and upends narrative convention with dazzling wordplay and thrilling imagery. Inhabiting a world trapped somewhere between dreams and reality, these poems fuse the political and personal, public and private, pleasing and piquant, to examine both calamities and the dogged persistence required to endure. On display throughout is Khalastchi’s exceptional capacity for detail and specificity, filling up this world to the point of breaking but never beyond, insisting on survival despite it all.    
 
Crowds around the circus serve as means of an escape, 
a legislative party bus of palliative care. There standing 
by the advent tent are penitential dentures, striking in 
their likeness to entire choking towns. Backed down 
and bound the carnival carnivorous is glowing, a 
midway ways away alit and stilted by the night.
—Excerpt from “Trying to I Can’t Hit Anything Yet the Bodies Pile Up”
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