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In an Angry Season (Camino Del Sol)

de Lisa D. Chavez

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A white woman navigates her fear and uncertainty to learn the ways of the people she called savages, until she begins to dream "in Dakota, syllables sliding / on my tongue like tender pieces of meat." An African man, on display as a cannibal at the World's Columbian Exposition in 1893, sees into the future: "humiliations heaped up / as on overfilled plates . . . / . . . a country that casually / consumes its own." A woman holds the gray-blue barrel of a gun in her mouth, "the taste familiar / as her own blood." With an unexcelled command of narrative verse, Lisa Chávez tells the stories of American lives across more than a century. Whether retelling nineteenth-century captivity narratives or depicting contemporary American women confronting addiction and despair, Chávez investigates issues of identity and self-definition in the face of an often harsh and unremitting history. Her story-poems explore the ways in which people have been made captive--whether to racism or national policy, to bad marriages or alcoholism, to poverty or emotion--from the Inuit woman birthing a son among strangers to the wife now deranged by desire for another man: "He's the smoky slow-burn of chipotle on the tongue. My golden idol. My gospel revival. He's hashish sweet and languorous--my body's one desire." In the end, Chávez shows us a New World of promise in which an alchemist's assistant summons stories from stones by calling their names with "clicks of her tongue, / syllables of silver, turquoise, and jade," and a Native woman discovers her true power in an Alaskan bar. Passionate and political, In an Angry Season is a work of startling depth and breadth--an American history in poetry--that asks us what it means to be civilized.… (mais)
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Stark, raw narrative poetry about the oppressed in a "century/ of dishonor, suffering and pain;" this book will lay your soul bare. ( )
  mpho3 | Apr 12, 2012 |
This is my second book, and in my mind, quite a bit better than my first, Destruction Bay. Most of these poems were written while I was a graduate student at the University of Rochester. I became very interested in race relations in the 19th century, and a lot of these poems are drawn from historical sources: from captivity narratives and from photos and catalogues of the Worlds Fairs in Chicago and Saint Louis. I think of many of these poems as an exploration of the history of the United States. These poems are mostly narrative in style, and like my first book, most of them are not based on my personal experience, but rather show my passions, interests, and obsessions.
  cuervosueno | Jan 6, 2007 |
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A white woman navigates her fear and uncertainty to learn the ways of the people she called savages, until she begins to dream "in Dakota, syllables sliding / on my tongue like tender pieces of meat." An African man, on display as a cannibal at the World's Columbian Exposition in 1893, sees into the future: "humiliations heaped up / as on overfilled plates . . . / . . . a country that casually / consumes its own." A woman holds the gray-blue barrel of a gun in her mouth, "the taste familiar / as her own blood." With an unexcelled command of narrative verse, Lisa Chávez tells the stories of American lives across more than a century. Whether retelling nineteenth-century captivity narratives or depicting contemporary American women confronting addiction and despair, Chávez investigates issues of identity and self-definition in the face of an often harsh and unremitting history. Her story-poems explore the ways in which people have been made captive--whether to racism or national policy, to bad marriages or alcoholism, to poverty or emotion--from the Inuit woman birthing a son among strangers to the wife now deranged by desire for another man: "He's the smoky slow-burn of chipotle on the tongue. My golden idol. My gospel revival. He's hashish sweet and languorous--my body's one desire." In the end, Chávez shows us a New World of promise in which an alchemist's assistant summons stories from stones by calling their names with "clicks of her tongue, / syllables of silver, turquoise, and jade," and a Native woman discovers her true power in an Alaskan bar. Passionate and political, In an Angry Season is a work of startling depth and breadth--an American history in poetry--that asks us what it means to be civilized.

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