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When I have wandered long enough what am I still beholden to? Ifá.
Nature. Illness. Love. Loss. Misogyny. Aging. Africa. Our wounded
planet. In this sweeping yet intensely personal collection, Lauren
Martin tells the untold stories of the marginalized, the abused,
the ill, the disabled--the different. Inspired by her life's
experiences, including the isolation she has suffered as a result
both of living with chronic illness and having devoted herself to a
religion outside the mainstream, these poems explore with raw
vulnerability and unflinching honesty what it is to live
apart--even as one yearns for connection. But Night of the Hawk is
no lament; it is powerful, reverential, sometimes humorous, often
defiant--"Oh heat me and fill me / I rise above lines"--and full of
wisdom. Visceral and stirring, the poems in this collection touch
on vastly disparate subjects but are ultimately unified in a
singular quest: to inspire those who read them toward kindness,
compassion, and questioning.
When their lives take surprising turns, seven individuals
stumble onto a connection with a surprising and powerful force.
These connections take place in settings as diverse as the
characters that encounter them: an overpass, a Baptist tent
revival, a camping trip, a Latin Catholic mass, a bus stop. What
they have in common is a realization that their small worlds have
been broken open, and new light is coming in.
Miguel loses his fight with alcoholism, keeping him distanced
from his beloved girlfriend and daughter. Isaac enters college
hoping to end his lifelong isolation, only to find that new choices
can threaten everything he left at home. Tasia is torn from her
comfortable home as drug lords threaten her life, forcing her to
flee to a strange country where she doesn't understand the language
or culture. Ellie's mother dies and her father abandons her, and
the child wanders dangerous city streets in search of an angel.
Peter marries a beautiful and brilliant woman, but can't bring
himself to connect with her, held back by constant weariness.
Margot, plagued with threatening voices and swirling fears, finds
herself homeless at the start of a bitter winter. Alice left her
job as a corporate executive to have a family, and now chafes at
the confines of her mommy-life. In their search for something
greater, whether a purpose for living or just a warm place to
sleep, these characters help each other encounter something that
breathes on the other side of silence.
Review by Kyle "Guante" Tran Myhre (2-time National Poetry Slam
champion): ""The Other Side of Silence" explores faith, but doesn't
sugarcoat or mythologize it; instead, it's a story about regular
people coming into contact with something transcendent, a story
about the God that exists inside every moment of clarity, embrace
with a loved one or decision to keep fighting. The novel is
heart-warmingly optimistic, but it also pulls no punches; while
humanity's goodness is on display here, that goodness is shining
through a brutal, dark-and-dirty realism. Characters deal with
racism, poverty, homophobia and oppressions of all kinds, and the
sometimes suffocating bleakness only makes the novel's various
spiritual and emotional payoffs all the more satisfying. To top it
all off, it's written with supreme confidence and remarkable
lyrical skill; this is an impressive, powerful debut novel."
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