Cantitate/Preț
Produs

Portrait of Us Burning: Poems

Autor Sebastián H. Páramo
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 oct 2023
A powerful debut collection exploring one family’s pursuit of the American Dream

Sebastián H. Páramo renders a semi-autobiographical collection, utilizing self-portraiture and memory to uncover how his Texan, working-class, Mexican American identity shapes his relationship to his half brother and to his family’s burning desire to become American.

Portrait of Us Burning begins with the humble picture of an immigrant American family. This picture starts to disintegrate—and, ultimately, burns—with the need to understand an inciting event that haunts the family throughout the second half of the collection. As the poems gather force and the picture dissolves further, Páramo asks us again and again: What does it mean to burn while becoming a part of a whole?
Citește tot Restrânge

Preț: 15400 lei

Nou

Puncte Express: 231

Preț estimativ în valută:
2947 3059$ 2457£

Carte disponibilă

Livrare economică 01-15 martie
Livrare express 15-21 februarie pentru 1661 lei

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780810146488
ISBN-10: 0810146487
Pagini: 112
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.17 kg
Editura: Northwestern University Press
Colecția Curbstone Books 2

Notă biografică

SEBASTIÁN H. PÁRAMO has published poems in the Academy of American Poets’ Poem-A-DayNew England Review, Prairie Schooner, and elsewhere. He is the founding editor of The Boiler and serves as poetry editor for Deep Vellum. He lives in Texas.

Cuprins

Table of Contents

Where Your Father Was
 
I. Portrait of Us
Portrait of My Father as a Failed Romantic
Diego Rivera, the Flower Carrier, 1935
Self-Portrait as My Father, the Roofer
Where Your Mother Was
Portrait of a Firebird
Self-Portrait of the First Born's Questions
Footage of Us Playing
Watching The Lion King with My Father
Hibiscus
Dear Father
Self-Portrait as Half-Sibling
Diptych: Days of the Latch-Key Siblings
Portrait of Rivalry
Portrait of a Reunion
Self-Portrait While Holding My Mother’s Hand
The Laundromat Saint
Self-Portrait as My Mother’s Blood
Portrait of What He Didn’t Want
Unfaithful Father, Disobedient Son
When Father Sings
Portrait of a Boy Returning to Dirt
Stepping Through a Door
The Home Slaughter
Self-Portrait with Thunder & Exhaustion, or, Self-Portrait as My Father Crossing
Your Portrait in Smoke
Portrait of Family I
Footage of Me Tomorrow
Not Pictured:
           
II. Burning
Portrait of the Unsaid
Portrait of Vows
Self-Portrait Looking Backwards
My Mother’s Blessing
Portrait of My Parents’ Desire          
Portrait of My Mother, as the Love Embrace of the Universe, the Earth (Mexico), Myself, Diego, and Señor Xolotl
After El Hombre by Rufino Tamayo
Big Tex Is on Fire!
Lost Footage of Us Playing
Studying Abroad in Mexico, Looking Up at Man of Fire by Jose Clemente Orozco
Footage of My Father Telling a Story about Dirt
When Father & I Speak
Father’s Advice
Footage from the Field
Sobbing in a U-Haul
Diptych: Dreams on Fire
My Father Never Speaks about His Father
Blood & Breath
Footage of Me Yesterday
Portrait of Us Burning
Everything Is on Fire
When My Mother’s Portrait Sings
Portrait of Family as a Bag of Worms
Portrait of Family II
Cajeta
Still Life with Salt on Fruit
Watching the End of the Film Paris, Texas
Forgive Me, Brother
Distant Father
The Ownership of the Night
 
Acknowledgments

Recenzii

Sebastián H. Páramo’s Portrait of Us Burning glows with possibility. The pyre is a rivalry between half-brothers for their father’s love, for belonging beyond divorce, for a future and a family that is not “anyone else’s life.” What I respect—as a poet and as a Chicana daughter—is the vulnerability it takes to confess that sometimes being born feels like a cosmic mistake. Páramo is asking for forgiveness without knowing from whom. What do we do when we feel indebted to the suffering our parents endured for not being white? For how they chose to love in gasps, in clutches—to make surviving desirable? Who do we become? Portrait of Us Burning sips at these questions. It is a pleasure and a relief to read what so many Chicanos rarely say. – Sara Borjas, author of Heart like a Window, Mouth like a Cliff

Descriere

In his debut collection, Portrait of Us Burning, Sebastián H. Páramo explores how his Texan, working-class, Mexican American identity shapes his relationship to his half brother and to his family’s burning desire to become American.