"Like the poet's native Chicago, even when violent or troubling,
Paul Martinez Pompa's poems risk beauty. His work possesses a
fluidity that appears both effortless and well earned. His is a
Chicago Renaissance of one--Gwendolyn Brooks's Bronzeville and Carl
Sandburg's 'city of big shoulders' becoming a 'city of broken
lovers' and 'an entire city in your ears' in Martinez Pompa's
capable hands. Playful and political and passionate, the poems in
"My Kill Adore Him" mark an important debut, one you'll surely
adore." --Kevin Young, author of "Dear Darkness" and "For the
Confederate Dead "
"This is an important book if we care about the lives of men,
day-laborers, immigrants, factory workers and those on the urban
fringe who don't get a fair shake. And this is an important book if
we don't. Paul Martinez Pompa knows how to write; these poems
vividly evoke people and lives that urge us toward awareness and
honesty and compassion. Poetry can do no better than this."
--Valerie Martinez, author of "Each and Her "and "Absence,
Luminescent."
"Paul Martinez Pompa deconstructs with a deft sword. Straddling
literary strategies, no supposition nor paradigm is safe. He slays
the stereotypic dragons within as well as without, putting popular
culture, elegy, nightmare, personal narrative, identity and gender
politics in the same hat, and drawing from the source, Pompa plays
a poetic hand for keeps. Every turn of trope is more delightful
than the last--a breakaway collection from an exciting new writer."
--Lorna Dee Cervantes, author of "Drive: The First Quartet "
"This is one tough, smart poet. The poems of Paul Martinez Pompa
are gritty and visceral, but never cross the line into
sensationalism. They are poems that vividly evoke the urban world,
especially Chicago, without ever lapsing into urban cliche. They
are poems that seek justice for the Latino community without ever
resorting to the overheated language that all too often consigns
poetry of social conscience to oblivion." --Martin Espada, 2008
Andres Montoya Poetry Prize judge
"My Kill Adore Him" is a collection of poems from Andres Montoya
Poetry Prize-winner Paul Martinez Pompa. With a unique, independent
voice, Martinez Pompa interrogates masculinity, race, language,
consumerism, and cultural identity in poems that honor "los
olvidados," the forgotten ones, who range from the usual suspects
brutalized by police to factory workers poisoned by their
environment, from the victim of a homophobic beating in the boys'
bathroom to the body of Juan Doe at the Cook County Coroner's
Office. Some of the poems rely on somber, at times brutal, imagery
to articulate a political stance while others use sarcasm and irony
to deconstruct political stances themselves.
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