|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
|
The Chapbook (Paperback)
Theodore Worozbyt, Nicole Cooley, Drea Kato
|
R304
Discovery Miles 3 040
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
Includes chapbooks by Theodore Worozybt, Nicole Cooley, Drea Kato,
Monica Mody, C. J. Waterman, Dana Curtis, Carey Scott Wilkerson,
Adam Moorad, and a review of Joyelle McSweeney's The Necropastoral
by Amy Wright.
In Breach, New Orleans native Nicole Cooley recalls Hurricane
Katrina and its aftermath in gritty, poignant detail, bearing
witness to the destruction of a region and to its recovery. Ranging
from the urgent to the reflective, these poems speak not only to
the horrors of the immediate disaster, but also to family dynamics
in a time of crisis and to the social, political, and cultural
realities that contextualized the storm and its wake. In the title
poem, Cooley invokes the multiple meanings of the word "breach" --
breach of the levees, breach of trust -- which resonate with
survivors in the Crescent City, and in "Evacuation," she recounts
her efforts to encourage her parents to leave the city and her
harrowing three-day wait to hear from them after they refused. A
number of poems, including "Write a Love Letter to Camellia Grill,"
"The Superdome: A Suite," and "Biloxi Bay Bridge Still Out," offer
a broad range of voices and experiences to expand the perspective
beyond Cooley's own family. With language and images both powerful
and precise, this compelling collection dares us to "watch the
surface of the city tear like loose skin."
Twenty individuals were executed and more than 150 imprisoned. The
historical body of evidence that remains from the Salem witch
trials of 1692 touched the hands, mind, and imagination of poet
Nicole Cooley, compelling her to seek entry to an inaccessible past
of lies. The Afflicted Girls, so named after the young women who
claimed to be victims of witchcraft, spans the centuries to give
voice to those both audible and silent on history's pages--accusers
and accused of several kinds: wife and husband, servant and master,
congregant and minister, and, not least, "bewitched" and "witch."
Piercing, enchanting, Cooley's poems form a remarkable narrative,
one that displays the enormous cultural power the Salem witch
trials retain in twenty-first-century America.
|
|