City of Skypapers

Author:   Marcela Sulak
Publisher:   Black Lawrence Press
ISBN:  

9781625578372


Pages:   100
Publication Date:   01 May 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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City of Skypapers


Overview

City of Skypapers, a 2021 National Jewish Book Award Finalist in poetry, records the continuity between the personal and the national, the present and the historic. Grounded in the Jewish calendar and landscapes of Tel Aviv, and leavened with self-deprecating humor, these poems examine what it took ""to get here today""-and these todays add up into this rich, maximalist collection. Poems engage with the Arab-Israeli conflict, Gaza, and race in personal ways. Other poems document single motherhood and quotidian moments with clarity and power. ""Time ripens"" in Sulak's poems ""on the vines and limbs, along the laundry line."" A full life emerges in these pages, and we are enriched by having inhabited that life.

Full Product Details

Author:   Marcela Sulak
Publisher:   Black Lawrence Press
Imprint:   Black Lawrence Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.149kg
ISBN:  

9781625578372


ISBN 10:   1625578377
Pages:   100
Publication Date:   01 May 2021
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Reviews

'I've grown/ very strong carrying around what I have lost, ' writes Marcela Sulak in her watchful and multitudinous new book. The pages of City of Skypapers embrace cast-off shoes, ripe figs, salvaged teacups, the jackals on the outskirts of Tel-Aviv, all the while exploring the unexpected ways we allow ourselves to talk to god. Sulak's poems map psychological and emotional journeys, traversing religious, spiritual, agrarian and lunar cycles. They weave fig and citrus, salt and oil, the fragility of peace and the threat of violence. 'I am watching as time ripens, ' writes Sulak, and we watch too, 'thinking of all / the things that didn't go wrong, ' feeling like Sulak that 'there is good in the world in which I wish to live.' This book may hold 'inadvisable faith' but, in its way, it also affirms it."" --Tess Taylor ""If I were making the soundtrack to Marcela Sulak's fourth collection of poetry, City of Skypapers, it would feature layer after layer of birdsong, punctuated by the distant howl of sirens warning of incoming missiles. After years of adventurous travel--from Texas to Tubingen, from Chile to the Czech Republic via Vilnius, Paris, Caracas and (God help her) South Bend, Indiana--Sulak has made her home in Tel Aviv, a city of skyscrapers, to be sure, but also of unlikely street scenes, birds singing in gardens, and the never-absent fear of coming war. Describing the work of a poet in Gaza, she says his poetry reminds her of 'people or plants that had been/uprooted, and washed ashore somewhere else.' Sulak's poems often give a sense of uprootedness as well: The phrase 'To get here today...' runs like a refrain through several poems, each detailing both the daily struggles of city life and the unlikely histories--personal or grand in scale--that bring us to each moment of our days. Perhaps it is because of her peripatetic life that Sulak finds her source of consolation in growing things, in plant-life, children, and memories. In this, our world of troubles, listen to her songs."" --Robert Archembeau ""The title of Marcela Sulak's fifth collection of poems, City of Skypapers, feels apt for its deliciously long lines hang suspended between the holy and the home, between the rituals that 'elevate the loaf' and those of Shabbat that 'place roses in their vase, candles in their stick.' This American Israeli poet, teaching and raising a daughter in the Middle East, acknowledges both the 'wreckage of the Byzantine villages' as well as the peril of living in a place where 'the antennae at the military base quiver' and where 'no one knows what time our daily missile will appear.' At the same time, this poet embraces Tel Aviv's quotidian humor writing an ode to the city's garbage collectors whose 'clarity' she craves and praising 'the season for shedding shoes...every last one of them black.' The brilliant cadence of Sulak's poems, 'keeping pace with the current' of the Yarkon River along which the poet runs, not only enact, but also celebrate what it means to be alive 'in a place where the flowers are old enough to have stories.' These poems should be read, perhaps even sung."" --Sarah Wetzel ""What's it like to be Marcela Sulak in her City of Sky? What do her papers reveal? They show an irony, a tenderness, a way of reaching for others, for her daughter, for her sunlit, conflicted, demanding Israeli landscape, from 'pomegranate season' into the heavens beyond the wars. They are populous papers, generous poems: they celebrate 'stars, not planes, ' and they lift up real people, famous, semi-famous and known only to themselves. They leap from jackals to jealousy, from voting booths to veils over Heaven, worldwide nets of friends and long-lined reachings-out to single sentences of loneliness. They record the holy, the everyday, the errors and the rightness in 'other people's scripts;' they have the rightness of journalism and the rightness of visions. They tolerate and sometimes love their Jerusalem, 'full of inadvisable faith, ' even as they reach out to Tel Aviv in sonnets, to America in letters, to Gaza, to the clouds. They can help, now. And there is nothing much like them."" --Stephanie Burt


Author Information

Marcela Sulak' s five Black Lawrence Press titles include The Fault (2024), National Jewish Book Awards finalist, City of Sky Papers (2021), lyric memoir Mouth Full of Seeds (2020), Decency (2015), and Immigrant (2010). She' s co-edited the Rose-Metal Press title Family Resemblance: An Anthology and Exploration of 8 Hybrid Literary Genres. Sulak' s translations from the Czech, French, and Hebrew have been recognized by PEN and the National Endowment for the Arts. Sulak is managing editor of The Ilanot Review, and directs the Shaindy Rudoff Graduate Program in Creative Writing at Bar-Ilan University, where she is Associate Professor of American Literature.

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Latest Reading Guide

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