A Small Story about the Sky
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
April 20, 2015
“Feeding the birds, by accident I spill the seed,” writes Rios (The Dangerous Shirt), Arizona’s first poet laureate, in the opening lines of his 13th volume. Pigeons flood the scene, and suddenly the average becomes the extraordinary. For Rios, the spilling of seed and the coming of birds are together a sign that a normal day has not been broken, but fractured. In that fracture time and place seem to form a prism; anything is possible. Rios peppers his book with listlike sonnets wherein nature becomes a vehicle for conjuring magic and telling the stories of the borderlands between the U.S. and Mexico. “The border is mighty, but even the parting of the seas created a path, not a barrier.” For Rios that path involves the “fierce what-was in all of us,” the varied universes that exist in our lives—not so much Frost’s “road less traveled” as both roads at once. Here a humble cattle fence becomes the terrifying, mesmerizing border fence; rabbits run in a field, and the specters of INS agents appear in a backyard. There is an order to history, to ancestry, but “the immense elephant of things” is inexplicable and rarely sensible. Rios knows this and doesn’t shy from it; he embraces it.
May 1, 2015
Poet laureate of Arizona and author of nearly a dozen books of poetry, three collections of stories, and Capirotada: A Nogales Memoir (1999), Rios delivers another stunning book of poems, rich in impeccable metaphors, that revel in the ordinariness of morning coffee and the crackle of thunderous desert storms. In one sonnet, Rios addresses injustice in the borderlands, capturing with mathematical precision the everyday struggles that many migrants face The border is an equation in search of an equals sign. A series of sonnets about desert flora abounds with fantastic, magical imagery Bougainvilleas do not bloomthey bleed and Apricots are eggs laid in trees by invisible golden hens. Likewise, Rios' bestiary sonnets overflow with inimitable similes, worthy of a book unto themselves Minnows are where a river's leg has fallen asleep and Gnats are sneezes still flying around. This robust volume is the perfect place to start for readers new to Rios and a prize for seasoned fans.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)
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