The Gutter Spread Guide to Prayer: Autumn House Rising Writer Prize
Autor Eric Tranen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 iun 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781938769511
ISBN-10: 1938769511
Pagini: 72
Dimensiuni: 165 x 241 x 8 mm
Greutate: 0.11 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Autumn House Press
Colecția Autumn House Press
Seria Autumn House Rising Writer Prize
ISBN-10: 1938769511
Pagini: 72
Dimensiuni: 165 x 241 x 8 mm
Greutate: 0.11 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Autumn House Press
Colecția Autumn House Press
Seria Autumn House Rising Writer Prize
Notă biografică
Eric Tran is a resident physician in psychiatry in Asheville, North Carolina. His poems have appeared in Prairie Schooner, Crab Orchard Review, Four Way Review, and many others.
Cuprins
I
Starting with a Line by Joyce Byers
Recommendation
Lectio Divina: Emma Frost
Pulse
Days After Orlando I Read the X-Men
A Favor
Portrait in Pleather Tee
Eloisa—
Explaining Again Why I Can’t Give Blood
My Mother Asks How I Was Gay before Sleeping with a Man
Compromise
I Tell My Mother about My Depression
Ode to My Morning Meds
Your Doppelgänger
Lectio Divina: Hektor the Assassin
II
Revisions
Regrets, in the Style of Clue
Portraits of the Days’ Griefs
Absorbing Man Becomes a Pile of Coke
Declaration with Immigrants’ Child Eating Habits
Treatise on Whether to Write the Mango
I Wrote a Poem with Faggot
I Learned D&D When 45 was Elected
Starting with a Line from a Minor Character in Fury Road
Lectio Divina: Vision
Amadeus Cho, Totally Awesome Hulk
How to Pray
Hermione Granger and the Reciprocal Erasure
Lectio Divina: Big Barda and Mister Miracle
Closure
IIIEclipse, One Month Before
If You Had Asked What a Poem Meant
Lectio Divina: Black Bolt #6
Portrait as Captain America Holding a
Helicopter with a Bicep Curl
When All That’s Left is Metaphor
Aubade After Chemo
Untitled (Portrait of Ross in L.A.): Mixed Material: Felix Gonzelez-
Torrez: 1991
Self Portrait as the Fire
Alternatives to Saying It
Dear ______,
Portrait as Orpheus, 10 Years Old
Abstract
Answers
He Who Helps Drag Queens Descend the Stairs
Garden
Starting with a Line by Joyce Byers
Recommendation
Lectio Divina: Emma Frost
Pulse
Days After Orlando I Read the X-Men
A Favor
Portrait in Pleather Tee
Eloisa—
Explaining Again Why I Can’t Give Blood
My Mother Asks How I Was Gay before Sleeping with a Man
Compromise
I Tell My Mother about My Depression
Ode to My Morning Meds
Your Doppelgänger
Lectio Divina: Hektor the Assassin
II
Revisions
Regrets, in the Style of Clue
Portraits of the Days’ Griefs
Absorbing Man Becomes a Pile of Coke
Declaration with Immigrants’ Child Eating Habits
Treatise on Whether to Write the Mango
I Wrote a Poem with Faggot
I Learned D&D When 45 was Elected
Starting with a Line from a Minor Character in Fury Road
Lectio Divina: Vision
Amadeus Cho, Totally Awesome Hulk
How to Pray
Hermione Granger and the Reciprocal Erasure
Lectio Divina: Big Barda and Mister Miracle
Closure
IIIEclipse, One Month Before
If You Had Asked What a Poem Meant
Lectio Divina: Black Bolt #6
Portrait as Captain America Holding a
Helicopter with a Bicep Curl
When All That’s Left is Metaphor
Aubade After Chemo
Untitled (Portrait of Ross in L.A.): Mixed Material: Felix Gonzelez-
Torrez: 1991
Self Portrait as the Fire
Alternatives to Saying It
Dear ______,
Portrait as Orpheus, 10 Years Old
Abstract
Answers
He Who Helps Drag Queens Descend the Stairs
Garden
Recenzii
"Tran addresses the loss of a friend through meditations on art, pop culture, and identity in his vibrant debut. . . . Readers will find that these complex and contradicting qualities are enacted in the collection itself."
"In the poem, 'Pulse,' Eric Tran describes the 'Rapture and rupture, / every sizzled bead / of black sweat / spit swollen out / our skin.' Every poem in this collection is a relentless examination of 'rapture and rupture,' an intricate and tender inquisition into the boundless motion of desire and grief, the wanting and breaking. In poem after poem, The Gutter Spread Guide to Prayer offers us a politics of nuance, the inextricable realities of identity and body as they collide with an often beautiful and terrible world. The poems let every light into them, as Tran compels us to 'want it in public / loud and bold so walls / remember our scent.'"
"These poems, with their restless forms and lexicons, needle themselves through the psyche; they suture and sear, harboring speakers of myriad aftermaths. True to a physician’s gaze, Tran's gaze, in its unflinching obsession with the renewal and failure of bodies—both tender and visceral—expose and heal at once. They hold large themes like grief, friendship, love, and inheritance against the luminous light of the mundane, declaring, with bold tenderness, that to keep the world we love well is to dismantle its hierarchies through language, and to live at the seat of feeling by embodying the possibilities of wonder. Bravo, Eric."
"Tran is a poet with uncommon superpowers. 'I don’t mean / escape, but more like / stars flamboyant in the black / mouth of night' he writes. And when his poems turn to realm of comic books, it’s never about 'escape.' Instead, it’s a powerful effort to manage and navigate intense, personal grief. The Gutter Spread Guide to Prayer is a tremendous debut—one that reaches through despair to offer us something sacred. "