List price: $24.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $12.47
Collectible price: $23.29
Buy one from zShops for: $16.37
Used price: $4.50
Collectible price: $6.87
Buy one from zShops for: $4.95
List price: $15.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $0.76
Buy one from zShops for: $8.59
"POETRY LIKE BREAD is an engrossing, readable, and highly passionate poetry anthology...It gives us poetry that sustains, that nourishes, and that is available to all." --Poetry Flash
"These works demonstrate with eloquence that the task of poetry-and all literature-is to challenge us, to illuminate our world and our lives, to force us to examine that which we take for granted and to act in solidarity for something new, to 'give name to the nameless so it can be thought.'" --The Nation
"...engrossing, readable, and highly passionate poetry." --Bloomsbury Review
"Astonishingly bold young poet." --The New York Times Book Review
"Without ever relying on abstractions such as 'racism' or 'poverty', [Marín Espada] brings the reader face to face with these conditions by showing us the human tissue these terms so often mask." --Bloomsbury Review
List price: $24.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $5.79
Collectible price: $21.45
Buy one from zShops for: $7.00
The brutal and violent imagery intermingled with straightforward narrative depicts controversial political and social issues with a sharp wit and startling poignancy. "Sing in the Voice of a God Even Atheists Can Hear," a poem addressing the arrest of poet Demetria Martinez for poetry allegedly illustrating her support of illegal immigrants, provides a blunt and stinging social commentary through its imagery and tone: "The prosecutor spoke 'smuggling' as if two pregnant refugees were bundles of heroin, not fleeing a war of slit bellies. . ."
However, the true power and gift of Espada's work lies in his ability not to condense complex social situations into abrupt, everyday language, but rather his ability to transform the grotesqueness of everyday. Consequently, the author's voice is not limited to being accusatory, but rather attains a transcendent prophetic significance. In one of the collection's final poems, "Because Clemente Means Merciful," Espada depicts the birth and uncertain future of his young son. Although Espada does initially provide a sharp critique of society in his portrayal of the medical society treating his son, "the pediatrician who never called, the yawning intern, the hospital roommate's father from Guatemala, ignored by the doctors," the poem closes on a note of hope. The speaker is able to transcend a lack of resources and understands the significance of his son's emergence from sickness. Although his accusatory tone acknowledges a continued future of inequality, "I know someday you'll stand beside the Guatemalan fathers, speak in the tongue of all the shunned faces," the speaker ends on a powerful divine message of hope, "[You will] breathe in a music we have never heard, and live by the meaning of your name."
Used price: $21.00
Buy one from zShops for: $25.00
List price: $21.00 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $7.58
Collectible price: $14.56
Buy one from zShops for: $8.98
A Mayan Astronomer in Hell's Kitchen is the title of Martín Espada's new book. The title reflects the cultural and linguistic mix in which Espada lives, shuttling from his Puerto Rican heritage to Old Guard Connecticut.
The book begins in Puerto Rico with the poet's relatives. These include a dying grandmother and a cousin whose stock of miracle cookware fails to heat the family dinner. About his father in Brooklyn, the poet writes:
Sometimes I dream
my father is a guitar,
with a hole in his chest
where the music throbs
between my fingers
("My Father as a Guitar")
Espada also writes about a magically real politician ("The Governor of Puerto Rico Reveals at His Inaugural That He Is The Reincarnation of Ponce de Leon") and the mixture of foreign birds in a luxury hotel in San Juan:
The White cockatoo from Australia
twirls tricks with a hostess
. . .
the scarlet macaw of Brazil
yammers a joke about pina coladas
. . .
the peacock of India
skitters around the koi pond
. . .
the frostbitten turkey from North Carolina
thaws in the kitchen
("Ornithology at the Caribe Hilton")
These poems range from the deadly serious to the comic. "The Carpenter Swam to Spain" is about the Spanish Civil War and "The River Will Not Testify" is about a Colonial massacre of Indians. Espada also speaks about the Rosenbergs and Mumia Abu-Jamal. Other poems can make you laugh out loud such as "Anarchism and the Parking Meter" and "Why I Went to College":
If you don't,
my father said,
you better learn
to eat soup
through a straw
cause I'm gonna
break your jaw.
The book's best combination of social commentary and humor, as well as the most intense cultural conflict, occurs in Connnecticut where Espada's in-laws have been resident since 1680. At Thanksgiving, he silently compares the New England fare to the "turkey with arroz y habichuelos and plátanos" he grew up with. Later, his father-in-law hauls out a small cannon and fires it at some old tombstones; "This way, if I hit anybody, / they're already dead." The poet concludes: "When the first / drunken Pilgrim dragged out the cannon at the first Thanksgiving - / that's when the Indians left." ("Thanksgiving"). With humor, Espada compares the father-in-law's lack of value for his cultural heritage with the poet's own sense of the past.
Espada has serious things to say, but he is not preaching. His language is direct and pulls the reader along through images of both personal and political history. This book shows that Mr. Espada is a mature poet who continues to offer readers a great variety.
Used price: $9.20
Used price: $3.69
Collectible price: $44.00
The title poem is a reflection on 9/11 and its consequences. Espada praises ("alabanza"="praise") the 43 restaurant workers at Windows on the World who perished in the tragedy. The respect he has for these human beings and for all of us in a post-9/11 world is both humbling and empowering. This is how we begin our healing. This is how we begin building a better world.