Reading both of these books together
was an experience in and of itself. Both of these poetry collections dealt with
a Latinx experience of immigration and both came from such personal spaces. I
have to talk about one and then the other, in order to truly give the right
amount of space I believe each deserve.
The
Verging Cities evoked a lot of core concepts from this class. In it, I saw the
poet give us many land based descriptions that she found on herself, showing
the reader the true connection between land and human, and how thin those
barriers and boundaries are. I found myself often chocking up and tearing at the
dedication to her friend (who was more than a friend but Friendship is powerful
and I believe that connection was between them too) and lover, who had gone
missing, probably captured in some sense of the word and taken back to Mexico,
or at least the poet hopes. And through, even the first poem in the book, the
reader hopes so too!
This collection specifically ignited
me in a way, to get this vision of the poet and her longing and her dedication to
the longing but also for an answer. In one poem, the poet fears her lover is
dead and imagines carrying his body across the border, his weight for an
answer, still no answer and the poet breathes. There is so much power in this
collection that I was simply overwhelmed. I really enjoyed the way the poet
structured some of her poems, I think of the poem that she turned into acts in
a play, and how wonderfully worded and poignant they were.
Though this collection was written
in 2015, things have gotten worse, and I fear more and more and find myself
wanting to do more and more to speak up and fight back about this issue.
Unaccompanied
carried a different energy and feel for me. The poet Javier Zamora has shed
a beautiful light on his experience coming across the border. About the
attempts and about the dangerous barriers blocking his way over. I enjoyed
reading this politically charged collection because Zamora did such a good job
of bringing out his own experiences and centering them. I think about the poem Cry Baby and how he ties in stories of
his mother and father meeting each other. And the horrible gang violence that
has made his upbringing fraught with challenges.
One image that sticks out to me from
the poetry collection are one man’s brown arms shielding another in the desert from
la migra, from danger, from being found out. There is a quickness I can feel
through the details, a strangled love, an action of putting your wishes, dreams
and hopes in the essence of another person. An act of love by far. June 10th also strung a chord
with me, the day Javier officially came to San Francisco. After crossing the
border so many times.
Duane!
ReplyDeleteThis post made me think about the ways in which we've read all the books so far and how these somehow felt different. Maybe it was because we read them together and the impact of the two weighed heavier on our hearts. Maybe it's the fact that they both have distinct yet similar stories intertwined in them. I think the solidarity that is bridged between these books is beautiful and although you talked about them separately that is what I garnered from this post.
xoxo,
Rai
These collections are also highly narrative, and while we appreciate the beauty of the poems, the use of language, and of the body, we have the pain so animate, that it's hard to look away
ReplyDeletee
Duane, you make really beautiful remarks. Especially with your last line and how you leave us wanting more. It seems like this poetry book was one that moved you, as you mentioned, and made you fear more but also then find yourself wanting to do more. Love it!
ReplyDeleteDuane,
ReplyDeleteYes! When you say, " I really enjoyed the way the poet structured some of her poems, I think of the poem that she turned into acts in a play, and how wonderfully worded and poignant they were." That really popped for me because the poems, Zapicos especially were like a play in my head. So visual, from the images of the ants, the teeth growing in milk, La Migra in the hair of her lover, I could see everything and it became a very visceral experience for me through the visual of her words. Thanks for writing on that.