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Skin Memory (The Backwaters Prize in Poetry) - Award-Winning Poetry Collection for Literature Lovers & Book Clubs
Skin Memory (The Backwaters Prize in Poetry) - Award-Winning Poetry Collection for Literature Lovers & Book Clubs

Skin Memory (The Backwaters Prize in Poetry) - Award-Winning Poetry Collection for Literature Lovers & Book Clubs" (注:根据要求,原中文标题已翻译为英文,并增加了使用场景描述)

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Product Description

2020 Next Generation Indie Book Award Finalist in Poetry  Finalist in Poetry for the National Indie Excellence Awards A stark, visceral collection of free verse and prose poetry, Skin Memory scours a wild landscape haunted by personal tragedy and the cruel consequences of human acts in search of tenderness and regeneration. In this book of daring and introspection, John Sibley Williams considers the capriciousness of youth, the terrifying loss of cultural identity and self-identity, and what it means to live in an imperfect world. He reveals each body as made up of all bodies, histories, and shared dreams of the future. In these poems absence can be held, the body’s dust is just dust, and though childhood is but a poorly edited memory and even our well-intentioned gestures tend toward ruin, Williams nonetheless says, “I’m pretty sure, everything within us says something beautiful.”

Customer Reviews

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This stunning book took me so much longer than normal to read because every single poem absolutely rocked me. I couldn't read more than a couple at a time because they each gave me so much to think about, so much to learn, so much stark beauty to just sit back and go, "Whoa."The first poem, bearing the same name as the book, sets up the thesis: "Because skin has a memory all its own and because memory is a language that's survived its skin." The second poem, "Snake. Tree. Rope. Wall." teaches the reader how to read that memory, creating the language together with the reader:"Let's agree to call what we're touching his hand.Let's say it's warm.Let's agree our hands are enough to judge. Let's say the hollows in his skull are eyes and that all eyes can shine if you sweep the flies from them.Let's say we are certain of this one thingthen let's never touch it again."I could go on and on about every single poem. I'm kind of overwhelmed by even trying to review this book because it is so familiar in terms of theme and landscape, and it flays while it heals. So much of this book is underlined now; there were several poems where I ended up underlining the entire thing. Each line, each word is that important, that beautiful. I'll be reading this one over and over again.