Duende Poems

Tracy K. Smith

Book - 2007

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

811.6/Smith
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 811.6/Smith Checked In
Published
Saint Paul, MN : Graywolf Press c2007.
Language
English
Main Author
Tracy K. Smith (-)
Edition
1st Graywolf printing, 2007
Physical Description
87 p. ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781555974756
  • I. History Flores Woman The Searchers September
  • Letter to a Photojournalist Going-In
  • II. El Mar
  • Astral
  • Minister of Saudade I Don't Miss It Igor at Gunpoint Diego
  • Western Fragment
  • After Persephone To Burn with a Low Blue Flame One Man at a Time Poem in Which Nobody Says, "I Told You So"
  • Now That the Weather Has Turned Duende
  • III. Slow Burn Interrogative
  • When Zappa Crashes My Family Reunion Theft "I Killed You Because You Didn't Go to School and Had No Future" "Into the Moonless Light" The Opposite of War Costa Chica In Brazil
  • Vaya, Camarón Nocture, Andalusian Dog
  • The Nobodies
  • Notes
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Federico Garc!a Lorca famously described duende in relation to flamenco music, but understood it as the dark wellspring for any artistic endeavor. As interpreted by Smith in her Laughlin Award-winning second collection, duende is the unforgiving place where the soul confronts emotion, acknowledges death and finds poetry. Smith writes from various unconsoled spaces, where "[k]nowledge is regret" and "[e]ach word is a wish." About the view from a failing marriage, Smith says: "I liked best/ When there was nothing/ That I could/ Or could not see." These 30 poems are roving, alluding to diverse countries and political situations, often shifting perspectives and locations abruptly between sections. Identity and history are often sources of pain, and Smith adopts various marginalized personas (Flores Woman, Persephone, John Dall, Ugandan girls sold into wifedom) unhinged by displacement. Identity politics bleed into personal lyric, where the poet admits, "I am not/ What you intend me to be." Writing in the voice of a Ugandan girl, Smith says, "Somewhere in every life there is a line./ One side to the other and you are gone./ Not disappeared but undone." Although the site of undoing may well be the source of duende, the poet's lyric brilliance and political impulses never falter under the considerable weight of her subject matter. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved