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In Woman of the River one of the major voices in Latin American
poetry confronts the political realities of contemporary Central
America. Many of the poems are political, direct, and condemnatory
of the United States’ presence in Latin America, and they are
rich, human documents rooted in Alegria’s knowledge of and love
for her subjects. As Carolyn Forche has written of Alegria’s
previous selection of poems, Flowers from the Volcano: “These
poems are testimonies to the value of a single human memory,
political in the sense that there is no life apart from our common
destiny. They are poems of passionate witness and confrontation.
Responding to those who would state that politics has no place in
poetry, she would add her voice to that of Neruda’s: we do not
wish to please them . . . .” She carries within her the ancient
blood of the Pipiles and laces her language with mesitizo
richness.”
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R205
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