“As a conversation, the poem is inspired by the space between us, the overlap where our concerns resonate and are amplified. It's shaped most by the insidious nature and continual presence of eugenics in society, and by a desire to find a voice for our agency. We began by deciding to write a double helix, to indicate our collaboration and our genetics—it was a form that both constrained and liberated our phrases.”
An interview with Andy Jackson and Gaele Sobott in the Massachusetts Review