Hymn for the Black Terrific
Poems
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
September 15, 2013
Petrosino's second book after her well-received debut, Fort Red Border (love poems to an imagined Robert Redford), begins as a lyrical rush: "If kept the colored if of knife, the colored feet, & kept a folio behind a door outsized. My will to touch, outsized, that colored if....If you, my scrim, my awl, behind a door should sleep, & then--if I should come, in swarms of dark?" These poems have an edge, and there's a flair for strangeness in the fragmented lines: "I live in a country they/ didn't leave for me. My color secretes/ like taffy through my pores, or should. But I'm less/ polite when pulled. Try to tell by the kidneys." The book's final section introduces the "eater," whose "mind is dark as drink" and whose relationship to food, love, and the world at large is unusual and wild. This is the point when readers may start asking questions, and the poem will answer without giving itself away too easily. VERDICT Petrosino is a rising young poet whose work libraries will want to own for readers looking for fresh talent.--Annalisa Pesek, Library Journal
Copyright 2013 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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