A virtuoso polyvocal correspondence with the daily news, ancient scripture and contemporary theory that puts the ongoing conflict in Israel/Palestine firmly in the crosshairs, Neighbour Procedure sees Zolf assemble an arsenal of poetic procedures and words borrowed from a cast of unlikely neighbours, including Mark Twain, Dadaist Marcel Janco, blogger-poet Ron Silliman and two women at the gym.
Rachel Zolf is Artist in Residence at the Center for Programs in Contemporary Writing at the University of Pennsylvania and the author most recently of Social Poesis.
There are glimmers of brilliance in this book of poetry, but my overall criticism is that too many pieces within are inaccessible, impenetrable, opaque.
The first couple of poems are full of earnestness and grieving to the point of beauty.
But so many are just single image poems, meant to show you a place in a situation, but not to take you through it or to any kind of conclusion.
Ultimately I just had to conclude that this book was not for me, I was not the intended audience, because I am neither Israeli nor Palestinian, I speak neither Hebrew nor Arabic.
But it's likely a good conversation for those groups to engage in.