Yermiyahu Ahron Taub's new collection of poems is rich with
intimacy and longing, culled from the dual influences of both
contemporary gay culture and timeless Jewish tradition. The
speakers in Taub's poems find themselves squarely displaced between
these two extremes, between the obligation to duty and the
surrender to pleasure, the lightness of daily foibles and the
darkness of long-held secrets and shame. The poems-bold,
unfettered-are draped around the reader like "a necklace of
whispers"-as objects both of beauty and of restraint. Taub is a
poet in whose hands I feel moved and informed, comforted and
implored. Charles Jensen
Author of The First Risk
This book is a dazzler for any of us who live between cultures
and find it hard to negotiate between absolute identities. In poems
more urgent than well-mannered, Taub cuts to the bone again and
again, making lyrical incisions through history, memory and myth in
a spirit of comic melancholy and lament. "Rosa, Rosa, how did it
come to this?" he asks, as if speaking for all of us who have
emerged from the last century complicated, thinking and feeling too
much. Here is a mind embodied enough to imagine the resiliency of
"a foreskin ... spontaneously sprouted " Julia Spicher
Kasdorf
Author of The Body and the Book: Writing from a Mennonite Life
Uncle Feygele is a funny, insightful, and amazingly humane
collection of poems. While the poems cleverly connect the seemingly
disparate identities of being openly queer and an Orthodox Jew,
they also manage something much bigger-illuminating the tiny
struggles and tricks of memory that are a part of all human
experience. T. Cole Rachel
Author of Surviving the Moment of Impact
Switching back and forth from English to Yiddish, Yermiyahu
Ahron Taub's poetry is at once socially engaged and sexy. The
collection as a whole, which includes poems in honor of the social
democrat Rosa Luxemburg and the Hebrew poet Rahel, and the "unnamed
and unremembered," is beautifully crafted. His poems on men ...
sizzling. David Shneer
Author of Through Soviet Jewish Eyes:
Photography, War, and the Holocaust
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