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Sweta Srivastava Vikram is an award-winning writer, poet, novelist,
author, essayist, columnist, blogger, and educator whose musings
have translated into four chapbooks of poetry, two collaborative
collections of poetry, a fiction novel, and an upcoming nonfiction
book of prose and poems. Her work has appeared in several
anthologies, literary journals, and online publications across six
countries in three continents. A graduate of Columbia University,
Sweta reads her work across the United States, Europe, and Asia.
She also teaches creative writing workshops. Sweta lives in New
York City with her husband. She has been nominated twice for the
Pushcart Prize.
About this chapbook
Beyond the Scent of Sorrow delves into the challenges faced by
women on a global level. The eucalyptus trees in southwest Portugal
are used as an archetype to symbolically elicit the challenges
women face in today's world. Boldly, the poems which are lyrical,
literal, short, and succinct, profess the unkind capabilities of
mankind.
Poets and Critics praise "Beyond the Scent of Sorrow"
"Sweta's poetic voice flows like water smoothing and shaping
stones. With great skill she uncovers, sometimes tenderly and other
times more forcefully, the shroud of fog surrounding the feminine
archetype... she has created and nurtured a garden, a wordscape, in
which trust and healing can flourish."
--Nick Purdon, author of The Road-shaped Heart
"Sweta Srivastava Vikram holds her work close. Fold it one way, a
poem of loss appears. Fold it yet again for a poem of longing. Her
work is as structurally sound as the elements. It soars with
anticipation. Vikram reveals lovely and powerful poems that will
long linger."
--Doug Mathewson, Editor Blink-Ink
Learn more at www.SwetaVikram.com
From the World Voices Series at Modern History Press
www.ModernHistoryPress.com
POE005060 Poetry: American - Asian American
SOC028000 Social Science: Women's Studies - General
SOC010000 Social Science: Feminism & Feminist Theory
Brave New Collection Honors Women's Spirit Worldwide
"No Ocean Here" bears moving accounts of women and girls in
certain developing and underdeveloped countries. The book raises
concern, and chronicles the socio-cultural conditions of women in
parts of Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. The stories, either
based on personal interviews or inspired by true stories, are
factual, visceral, haunting, and bold narratives, presented in the
form of poems.
"Sweta Srivastava Vikram is no ordinary poet. The 44 poems in this
slim volume carry the weight of unspeakable horrors and injustices
against women. Sweta's words span the globe. Her spare and
evocative phrases weave a dark tapestry of oppressive conventions
that in the telling and in our reading and hearing, she helps to
unravel."
-- Kay Chernush, Founder/Director, ArtWorks for Freedom
About the Author
Sweta Srivastava Vikram is an award-winning writer, two times
Pushcart Prize nominated-poet, novelist, author, essayist,
columnist, and educator whose musings have translated into four
chapbooks of poetry, two collaborative collections of poetry, a
novel, and a non-fiction book of prose and poems. Her work has
appeared in several anthologies, literary journals, and online
publications across six countries in three continents. A graduate
of Columbia University, she reads her work, teaches creative
writing workshops, and gives talks at universities and schools
across the globe. Sweta lives in New York City with her husband.
Available in hardcover, paperback, and eBook editions
Learn more at www.SwetaVikram.com
From the World Voices Series at Modern History Press
www.ModernHistoryPress.com
POE005060 Poetry: American - Asian American
SOC028000 Social Science: Women's Studies - General
FAM001000 Family & Relationships: Abuse - General
Sweta Srivastava Vikram is a multi-genre writer living in New York
City. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in literary journals,
online publications, and anthologies across six countries and three
continents. Sweta has attended several writing residencies and
workshops in the United States and Europe. She is a VONA writer and
a graduate of Columbia University.
About this Chapbook...
We have all lost a dear one at some point in our lives. Grief,
depending on the relationship with the one deceased, affects us
differently. I feel my Dada and Mausi's absence every single day
for disparate reasons. But these two losses have taught me that
their time had come. And that life is about celebrating those alive
and not just mourning those who have moved on. Optimism and faith
are the keys to overcoming the roadblocks life puts in our way.
This book tries to state that there is always hope for anyone
coping with grief. No one can tell us exactly how; the voyage has
to be undertaken by each of us individually.
Learn more about the author at www.swetavikram.com
From the World Voice Series at Modern History Press
www.ModernHistoryPress.com
POE003000 Poetry: Inspirational & Religious
SOC028000 Social Science: Women's Studies - General
SEL010000 Self-Help: Death, Grief, Bereavement
Brave New Collection Honors Women's Spirit Worldwide
"No Ocean Here" bears moving accounts of women and girls in
certain developing and underdeveloped countries. The book raises
concern, and chronicles the socio-cultural conditions of women in
parts of Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. The stories, either
based on personal interviews or inspired by true stories, are
factual, visceral, haunting, and bold narratives, presented in the
form of poems.
"Sweta Srivastava Vikram is no ordinary poet. The 44 poems in this
slim volume carry the weight of unspeakable horrors and injustices
against women. Sweta's words span the globe. Her spare and
evocative phrases weave a dark tapestry of oppressive conventions
that in the telling and in our reading and hearing, she helps to
unravel."
-- Kay Chernush, Founder/Director, ArtWorks for Freedom
About the Author
Sweta Srivastava Vikram is an award-winning writer, two times
Pushcart Prize nominated-poet, novelist, author, essayist,
columnist, and educator whose musings have translated into four
chapbooks of poetry, two collaborative collections of poetry, a
novel, and a non-fiction book of prose and poems. Her work has
appeared in several anthologies, literary journals, and online
publications across six countries in three continents. A graduate
of Columbia University, she reads her work, teaches creative
writing workshops, and gives talks at universities and schools
across the globe. Sweta lives in New York City with her husband.
Learn more at www.SwetaVikram.com
From the World Voices Series at Modern History Press
www.ModernHistoryPress.com
POE005060 Poetry: American - Asian American
SOC028000 Social Science: Women's Studies - General
FAM001000 Family & Relationships: Abuse - General
Sweta Srivastava Vikram is an award-winning writer, poet, novelist,
author, essayist, columnist, blogger, and educator whose musings
have translated into four chapbooks of poetry, two collaborative
collections of poetry, a fiction novel, and an upcoming nonfiction
book of prose and poems. Her work has appeared in several
anthologies, literary journals, and online publications across six
countries in three continents. A graduate of Columbia University,
Sweta reads her work across the United States, Europe, and Asia.
She also teaches creative writing workshops. Sweta lives in New
York City with her husband. She has been nominated twice for the
Pushcart Prize.
About this chapbook
Beyond the Scent of Sorrow delves into the challenges faced by
women on a global level. The eucalyptus trees in southwest Portugal
are used as an archetype to symbolically elicit the challenges
women face in today's world. Boldly, the poems which are lyrical,
literal, short, and succinct, profess the unkind capabilities of
mankind.
Poets and Critics praise "Beyond the Scent of Sorrow"
"Sweta's poetic voice flows like water smoothing and shaping
stones. With great skill she uncovers, sometimes tenderly and other
times more forcefully, the shroud of fog surrounding the feminine
archetype... she has created and nurtured a garden, a wordscape, in
which trust and healing can flourish."
--Nick Purdon, author of The Road-shaped Heart
"Sweta Srivastava Vikram holds her work close. Fold it one way, a
poem of loss appears. Fold it yet again for a poem of longing. Her
work is as structurally sound as the elements. It soars with
anticipation. Vikram reveals lovely and powerful poems that will
long linger."
--Doug Mathewson, Editor Blink-Ink
Learn more at www.SwetaVikram.com
From the World Voices Series at Modern History Press
www.ModernHistoryPress.com
POE005060 Poetry: American - Asian American
SOC028000 Social Science: Women's Studies - General
SOC010000 Social Science: Feminism & Feminist Theory
About the Author
Sweta Srivastava Vikram is a multi-genre writer and marketing
professional living in New York City. She is the author of "Because
All Is Not Lost" from Modern History Press and the co-author of
"Whispering Woes of Ganges & Zambezi" (Cyberwit 2010). Her work
has appeared in six countries across three continents. Sweta has
held recent artist residencies and workshops in Portugal, Ireland,
and several within USA. She is a graduate of Columbia University.
"In this innovative series, Sweta Srivastava Vikram
re-appropriates color. Cultures and mythologies collide along the
way, and the result is a chapbook that feels like a quest. In the
end, the colors are a map to identity. The child's pink tonsils or
the bride's red sari are not symbols, but rather mile markers. Like
Vikram's poems, they lead toward understanding"
--Erica Wright, Senior Poetry Editor, "Guernica"
About the Chapbook
The book delves into the implication and philosophy of colors from
a Hindu woman's point of view, from birth until death. The color
she adorns herself with almost depicts the story of her life.
Expressed through different poetic and verbal forms, each color in
the book has its own tone and is specific to different age groups.
Learn more at www.SwetaVikram.com
From the World Voices Series at Modern History Press
www.ModernHistoryPress.com
Sweta Srivastava Vikram is a multi-genre writer living in New York
City. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in literary journals,
online publications, and anthologies across six countries and three
continents. Sweta has attended several writing residencies and
workshops in the United States and Europe. She is a VONA writer and
a graduate of Columbia University.
About this Chapbook...
We have all lost a dear one at some point in our lives. Grief,
depending on the relationship with the one deceased, affects us
differently. I feel my Dada and Mausi's absence every single day
for disparate reasons. But these two losses have taught me that
their time had come. And that life is about celebrating those alive
and not just mourning those who have moved on. Optimism and faith
are the keys to overcoming the roadblocks life puts in our way.
This book tries to state that there is always hope for anyone
coping with grief. No one can tell us exactly how; the voyage has
to be undertaken by each of us individually.
Learn more about the author at www.swetavikram.com
From the World Voice Series at Modern History Press
www.ModernHistoryPress.com
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