Praise for English as a Second Language and Other Poems"With his third collection, Jaswinder Bolina hits his stride, melding fierce and heartbroken politics with a flair for the surreal to portray America in the throes of the pandemic. . . . Bolina's ironic humor feels like the inevitable vehicle for this insight, and these poems are often darkly laugh-out-loud funny."–Craig Morgan Teicher, NPR
"Always delivered with an edge of irony and incomparable wordcraft, Bolina's lyrics are by turns vividly imagistic ('starlings made an ecstatic / calligraphy against the gloam'), acoustically playful ('the umber end / of summer'), and infused with an acute scrutiny of historical and current events as the specter of American politics haunts the book. . . . Satisfying in its own right, this title should also compel readers to check out the rest of this author's urgently relevant work."–Diego Báez, Booklist, STARRED REVIEW"Bolina has gathered the mundane moments that make up a life and turned them into sparkling gems."–Publishers Weekly"Jaswinder Bolina turns the elegy on its head (or at least twists its arm) . . . and they are so often comic, making the reader chuckle as often as weep."–Charles Rammelkamp, The Lake
"Pierces through its sketch-comedy conceit . . . with poignent anxieties."–Christopher Spaide, Harriet Books, Poetry FoundationPraise for Jaswinder Bolina"Jaswinder Bolina remains a sincere poet of necessary ironies, and The 44th of July is his opus, his ode to how well our nation falls apart in front of us. Or, I should say, this book is a proper chronicle of how the ideal of America was never really made whole for all whom it claimed... These Whitmanian litanies and lovely long sentences mean to include the excluded and even to afford for delight where evil thrives. This is a brilliant book by a masterful poet." – Jericho Brown"But Bolina is not a magician, although sometimes a poet, a philosopher, can appear as one. He is simply paying attention. He's being sincere. And so Bolina will do in Of Color what a magician cannot: he will reveal how the trick is done. – The Rumpus"[Bolina] aims not so much to influence public opinion as to stitch back together shards of a torn dialog and bring it depth. The imagery comes bursting forth studded with sharp details about a wide range of subjects, from alienation to poverty to social protest." –Library Journal, starred review"As full of candor and ontological inquiry as they are of verve, panache, and wit, the poems in Bolina's second collection stretch and dilate, in order to, as the author puts it, 'feel so attached–like a ligament–to the whole shebang of human experience.' These poems include subject matter of all kinds, and to read them can feel like being led through the chaos of contemporary life by a warm yet incisive mind." – Publishers Weekly, starred review"Yes, these are 'political poems' but they are more than that–these are poems that are so well made that they sing; they roll off your tongue and strike through your soul." – Victoria Chang