Brute: Poems

Author:   Emily Skaja
Publisher:   Graywolf Press,U.S.
ISBN:  

9781555978358


Pages:   72
Publication Date:   01 May 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Brute: Poems


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Full Product Details

Author:   Emily Skaja
Publisher:   Graywolf Press,U.S.
Imprint:   Graywolf Press,U.S.
Dimensions:   Width: 17.70cm , Height: 0.60cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.176kg
ISBN:  

9781555978358


ISBN 10:   1555978355
Pages:   72
Publication Date:   01 May 2019
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Children / Juvenile
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Emily Skaja's Brute is at once terrifying and hypnotic, strange and yet profoundly meaningful. . . . Skaja's strangeness is emotive and as such her complex poetry demands attention and easily enchants readers with the need to know more. Satisfied and panting, the reader is hooked--this collection is nothing short of phenomenal. --Crab Fat Magazine Emily Skaja reaches for nature in Brute to overcome the loss of an abusive lover, to overcome grief. . . . Skaja knows exactly how to engage nature, readers, and life. Her diverse poetics prove her broad range of skills. She takes risks. . . . All poems in Brute flow with precision and ease. --The New York Journal of Books The poems in Emily Skaja's Brute speak of brutality, of breaking, of endings, of beginnings. Brute is an elegy for a relationship's end, an intimate excavation, but also, these poems are a rhapsody, a rage. Skaja's poetry is deft, nimble, willing to inhabit contradictions--'What is this impulse in me to worship & crucify / anyone who leaves me.' Each poem is exquisitely crafted, visceral, indelible. Brute will cut right through you, cut deep, but the writing is so assured, so necessary, that you will welcome the wound. --Roxane Gay Brute, though a collection of singular poems, is essentially one long, elegiac howl for the end of a relationship. It never lets up--this living--even when the world as we knew it is crushed. So what do we do with the brokenness? We document it, as Emily Skaja has done in Brute. We sing of the brokenness as we emerge from it. We sing the holy objects, the white moths that fly from our mouths, and we stand with the new, wet earth that has been created with our terrible songs. --Joy Harjo, judge's citation for the Walt Whitman Award


The poems in Emily Skaja's Brute speak of brutality, of breaking, of endings, of beginnings. Brute is an elegy for a relationship's end, an intimate excavation, but also, these poems are a rhapsody, a rage. Skaja's poetry is deft, nimble, willing to inhabit contradictions--'What is this impulse in me to worship & crucify / anyone who leaves me.' Each poem is exquisitely crafted, visceral, indelible. Brute will cut right through you, cut deep, but the writing is so assured, so necessary, that you will welcome the wound. --Roxane Gay Brute, though a collection of singular poems, is essentially one long, elegiac howl for the end of a relationship. It never lets up--this living--even when the world as we knew it is crushed. So what do we do with the brokenness? We document it, as Emily Skaja has done in Brute. We sing of the brokenness as we emerge from it. We sing the holy objects, the white moths that fly from our mouths, and we stand with the new, wet earth that has been created with our terrible songs. --Joy Harjo, judge's citation for the Walt Whitman Award


[In Brute], the anguish comes from an emotionally abusive lover and the abrupt end of a relationship. As the speaker excavates her grief and disbelief, she slowly moves from self-condemnation to a fiery insistence that she can overcome her boyfriend's damaging assessments of her worth and reclaim the power she once had. . . . The speaker's brutal honesty and emotional transformation offer an engrossing guide for anyone dealing with a devastating loss. --The Washington Post Emily Skaja's [Brute] is lyrical, visceral, sharp like a fang, and filled with lines that pierce and prod and stay embedded inside your skin. --NYLON The first section of [Brute] ends with a poem of exile: self-imposed, absolutely necessary, freeing. . . . There's everything in this strong debut. --The Millions Emily Skaja reaches for nature in Brute to overcome the loss of an abusive lover, to overcome grief. . . . Skaja knows exactly how to engage nature, readers, and life. Her diverse poetics prove her broad range of skills. She takes risks. . . . All poems in Brute flow with precision and ease. --The New York Journal of Books Skaja's poems are both primal scream-songs and elegies to the end of a relationship. . . . With relentless, driving energy, Skaja's poems seek brutal truths while searching for meaningful transformation. --Booklist Emily Skaja's Brute is at once terrifying and hypnotic, strange and yet profoundly meaningful. . . . Skaja's strangeness is emotive and as such her complex poetry demands attention and easily enchants readers with the need to know more. Satisfied and panting, the reader is hooked--this collection is nothing short of phenomenal. --Crab Fat Magazine The poems in Emily Skaja's Brute speak of brutality, of breaking, of endings, of beginnings. Brute is an elegy for a relationship's end, an intimate excavation, but also, these poems are a rhapsody, a rage. Skaja's poetry is deft, nimble, willing to inhabit contradictions--'What is this impulse in me to worship & crucify / anyone who leaves me.' Each poem is exquisitely crafted, visceral, indelible. Brute will cut right through you, cut deep, but the writing is so assured, so necessary, that you will welcome the wound. --Roxane Gay Brute, though a collection of singular poems, is essentially one long, elegiac howl for the end of a relationship. It never lets up--this living--even when the world as we knew it is crushed. So what do we do with the brokenness? We document it, as Emily Skaja has done in Brute. We sing of the brokenness as we emerge from it. We sing the holy objects, the white moths that fly from our mouths, and we stand with the new, wet earth that has been created with our terrible songs. --Joy Harjo, judge's citation for the Walt Whitman Award


Author Information

Emily Skaja grew up in rural Illinois and is a graduate of the creative writing MFA program at Purdue University. Her poems have been published in Best New Poets, Blackbird, Crazyhorse, FIELD, and Gulf Coast. She lives in Memphis, Tennessee.

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