These Voice Notes live in the everydayโdrugstore receipts, snickers bars, batteries, ginger aleโbut they detail, in their uniquely jotted, truncated language, what it is to be alive, what it is to bear witness to the world: sometimes alone, sometimes with loved others, on a planet that โmay snuff us out but... will remain.โ These poems carry the spirit of song, and feel as ancient as they do avant-garde. Part Niedecker, part Olson and OโHara, Voice Notes is a spare yet abundant delight.โLaura Sims, author of LookerThe notion of the notationalโWe find ourselves asking, what exactly is a note? As these voice notes suggest, itโs a beginningโand here, an endless series of endless beginnings that we can almost hear singing. These notes record whatever โleaps to mind,โ with the leap foregrounded, even choreographed in after-thought, graphically scored across the page. And yet the voice remains, almost but not quite captured; its transcription, while vivid, also records all that we miss when a voice gets arrested by writing. It all amounts to a marvelous contemplation of presence and absence and the crucial role of the voice in both.โCole Swensen, author of Art In Time and On Walking OnAdam Golaskiโs Voice Notes closes the gaps between voice, speech, writing, and improvisation, and then expands those very gaps with a singular music that pulses and pops, often with lovely, tender-stepping syllables: โlove you like light/closed eyes coruscate/light thโview bโhind yโrโiโyelids.โ Poems arrive via the backs of receipts (for Osco Drug, the Ritz Carlton, Grolier Poetry Book Shop), or as transcriptions of language spoken into the โvoice notesโ app. They invoke a sense of โelizabethanโ riffing, and ask the โcyptocrystalline question,โ all while tracing and tracking a sensual, moving trajectory: โThe tongue/pushes us past the world/as words land.โโSawako Nakayasu, author of Pink Waves