<p class=ql-align-justify>Tien Mai the poet-narrator of Daniel Samoilovich's book-length sequence <em>Awaking Demons</em> is a self-exiled Vietnamese princeling grumpily eking out a hotel life in 1930s Switzerland. 'Here/ where even the butterflies are different' is a source of amusement and amazement to him as he details the behaviour of the hotel servants and the other guests and the strange local customs. But more often his mind turns to the woman he has left behind: 'The distance between us is greater/than the empire of night' and to the consolations of Eastern art especially the poets of the Tang dynasty Wang Wei Du Mu and Li Po. Like them he stands at his lectern with his brushes composing in meticulous calligraphy in perfect ideograms poems of nature philosophy memory and love though against the backdrop of the Swiss lakes rather than the Yangtze river. Tien Mai is a rounded and subtle creation - querulous humorous cynical profound whimsical romantic - and rather a wonderful lyric poet.</p><p class=ql-align-justify><br></p><p class=ql-align-justify><br></p><p class=ql-align-justify>Samoilovich deals in the kind of poem of such perfect sensibility that current times seemed to have banished forever. -Pedro Rey <em>La Nación</em> Buenos Aires</p><p class=ql-align-justify><br></p><p class=ql-align-justify><br></p><p class=ql-align-justify>In his distancing his chosen strangeness Samoilovich combines an omnipresent irony with a lyricism of subtle melancholy demonstrating that as Pessoa that master of masks said the true poet is a great impostor (even when he seems to be speaking in his own voice). -Edgardo Dobry <em>Babelia El País</em> Madrid</p><p class=ql-align-justify><br></p>
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