Chris Abani’s Dog Woman
is a mesmerizing, haunting, and sometimes subversive exploration
of the personal and cultural politics of disempowerment and power.
In these heart rousing and lyrically complex poems, the poet enacts
the reconstruction of his feminized selves, and his personae struggle
to re-form and transform both themselves and the difficult worlds
they inhabit. At turns, earthy, enigmatic, devout, outraged, and
compassionate, these elemental women’s voices ring true, as
they sing siren songs, dirges, and hosannas, and as they navigate
into new and unknown territories of human will and endurance. Dog
Woman is a daring, trailblazing, and important book; it’s
a vital addition to the poetry of our times.
— Maurya
Simon, author
of Ghost Orchid.
These poems reveal a prodigious imagination, which is enlivened
by sardonic wit and an inexhaustible capacity for irony and empathy.
Daring to span a historical continuum that takes us as far back
as the rituals of Christ suffering, through the tragic history of
the Mayans of Mexico, to the starkly modern concerns of contemporary
life, these poems find beauty and grace in the most painful things.
The achievement here lies in the poet's ability to bring an engaging
intelligence to bear on the complexities of race, gender and memory.
Abani’s line has a sharp precision that turns a scream into
a line of memorable lyric music without losing the emotion and force.
That he does this again and again in poems of such vulnerability
speaks highly of Abani's art.
— Kwame
Dawes, author
of Midland. |