ARC review, book review, nonfiction

NMLCT: Poems by Paul Vermeersch (ARC Review)

Title: NMLCT: Poems
Author: Paul Vermeersch
Type: Nonfiction
Genre: Poetry
Publisher: ECW Press
Date published: September 2, 2025

A complimentary physical copy of this book was kindly provided by ECW Press in exchange for an honest review.

Fables and fairytales collide with virtual reality, artificial intelligence, and monstrous myths in a world where no one knows what to believe. In his eighth book of poems, Paul Vermeersch responds to the increasing difficulty of knowing what is real and what isn’t, what is our genuine experience and what is constructed for us by The Algorithm. In a “post-truth” society rife with simulations, misinformation, and computer-generated hallucinations, these poems explore the relationship between the synthetic and the authentic as they raise hope for the possibility of escape from MCHNCT (Machine City) to NMLCT (Animal City), where the promise of “real life” still exists.

These poems — all precisely 16 lines long, identically formed as though mass-produced — are themselves artificial creations, products of the imagination, sometimes disorienting but always vivid. They hold up a mirror not only to nature, but also to its unnatural distortions and facsimiles. In NMLCT, Vermeersch gives us his answer to an existence in thrall to the artificial. But it also foretells a different future, one where the air and the grass and the trees, and all the life they engender, might always be genuine and sensed and safe.

⤖ My Review ⬻

I don’t read a lot of poetry, but something about the cover and premise of NMLCT: Poems pulled me in. Having read it, I can now say that I enjoyed the vibes it gave me personally—Zootopia and Bladerunner or “Johnny Mnemonic” (the short story). The collection felt very atmospheric to me, almost cinematic in a strange, futuristic way, which made it easy to sink into.

I also thought it was super cool that at least one of the poems was written using binary code. Like…how creative is that?! A lot of the deeper meaning of the poems probably went over my head, but I still enjoyed the experience and the overall creativity of this author. Even without being able to unpack every layer, NMLCT: Poems was an interesting and memorable read for me.

⤖ Get Your Copy ⬻

⤖ Let's Chat ⬻

Thank you for reading my review! Have you read this book? What did you think? And if you haven’t read it yet, do you plan to? Let me know in the comments!

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