[...]: Poems

Author:   Fady Joudah
Publisher:   Milkweed Editions
ISBN:  

9781639551286


Pages:   100
Publication Date:   18 April 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
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[...]: Poems


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From one of our most acclaimed contemporary writers, an urgent and essential collection of poems illuminating the visionary presence of Palestinians. Fady Joudah’s powerful sixth collection of poems opens with, “I am unfinished business,” articulating the ongoing pathos of the Palestinian people. A rendering of Joudah’s survivance, [...] speaks to Palestine’s daily and historic erasure and insists on presence inside and outside the ancestral land.  Responding to the unspeakable in real time, Joudah offers multiple ways of seeing the world through a Palestinian lens—a world filled with ordinary desires, no matter how grand or tragic the details may be—and asks their reader to be changed by them. The sequences are meditations on a carousel: the past returns as the future is foretold. But “Repetition won’t guarantee wisdom,” Joudah writes, demanding that we resuscitate language “before [our] wisdom is an echo.” These poems of urgency and care sing powerfully through a combination of intimate clarity and great dilations of scale, sending the reader on heartrending spins through echelons of time. […]is a wonder. Joudah reminds us “Wonder belongs to all.”

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Author:   Fady Joudah
Publisher:   Milkweed Editions
Imprint:   Milkweed Editions
ISBN:  

9781639551286


ISBN 10:   163955128
Pages:   100
Publication Date:   18 April 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

I. [...] 3 [...] 4 [...] 6 [...] 7 [...] 8 Stick Figures 9 [...] 12 Mimesis 13 Bonsai Weeping Willow 14 [...] 15 [...] 16 [...] 18 [...] 19 Progress Notes 20 [...] 22 [...] 23 [...] 24 [...] 26 [...] 27 [...] 28 Eid Mubarak 29 [...] 30 [...] 31 [...] 32 [...] 33 II. [...] 37 I Seem as If I Am: Ten Maqams 38 Maqam for a Green Silence 49 III. [...] 53 Kufic 54 [...] 56 Barzakh 58 Leaves, Glass 60 Maqam for Apricot 61 [...] 62 Ode to an Onion 63 No Kissing, No Biting 64 This Time, Actual Bees 65 IV. [...] 69 [...] 71 Hummingbird 72 [...] 73 Dedication 74 V. Sunbird 79 Acknowledgments 81

Reviews

Praise for […]  “Raw as the open wound that is Palestine today, Joudah's collection challenges us to face the oppression and injustice that his people are living and dying through on a daily basis. His anger simmers just under the surface but his grief is tactile, as he delicately unwraps and reveals the human toll of intolerance. This devastating collection could not be more relevant or important.”— Grace Harper, Mac's Backs, Cleveland Heights, OH Praise for Tethered to Stars  “This is what we have had to do, amid pandemic, grief, political chaos, fires, human rights disasters: continue on with our lives. Doing chores [. . .] taking walks [. . .] teaching kids [. . .] trying to stay steady. In his brilliant forthcoming book, Tethered to Stars, Fady Joudah writes about the mysterious cosmos swirling with intricate linkages—as his phone is pinging. Ah, yes, Jerusalem, the Holy City! Right now, let’s call all our cities holy. Let’s hope our trees continue to communicate, whatever humans can or can’t accomplish.”—Naomi Shihab Nye, New York Times Magazine “True to its title, Joudah’s collection of poems musically connects the body to the Earth and the Earth to the stars [. . .] It’s earthy and ethereal, as we are.”—Houston Chronicle “Joudah centers his fifth poetry collection on the 12 star signs and other astrological phenomena, blending his physician's penchant for precision and the poet's ear for lyricism [. . .] What shines most brightly here is Joudah's ability to render extended imagery that plays out over several poems. An uprooted oak in one poem creates a place to plant olive pits in another. Dandelion and sunflower florets populate the pages. Butterflies lay eggs in lemon trees and enchant speakers from afar [. . .] Another stellar entry in this poet's expansive body of work.”—Booklist “This is a treatise on cosmic unity that does not shy away from grief, but that yearns for the immense, abstract sense of possibility, believing that ‘a heart remains a heart in its beyond’ [. . .] The clarity of Joudah’s imagery is countered by a complex choral voice that feels at turns analytical and biblical in its rise and fall. Each poem seems to be spoken from various perspectives, the roving voices echoing and replacing one another in their observations until both the speaker and addressee dissolve. ‘You’ll be everywhere,’ one poem closes. Joudah offers a nuanced vision of what connects man to the cosmos in this deeply searching book.”—Publishers Weekly “The poems in this brilliant book themselves stand beside our own sadnesses and grow large in our imaginations, like trees. [. . .] These poems, many among Joudah’s finest so far, are as intimate as the night sky.”—McSweeney’s “So much of Tethered to Stars grapples with what is difficult to understand. From the nature of stars to racial tension, mortality, and his own cultural heritage, Joudah uses his lyricism to attempt to uncover life's mysteries. This collection deals with these complex and inexplicable topics, and yet it does so in a way that never abandons its tenderness, curiosity, and admiration for the beauty of the world.”—The West Review “The poems in Fady Joudah’s Tethered to Stars reflect a poet’s pinnacle, where readers experience the vision of a virtuosic poet who possesses multiple registers and allusive riches, transforming them into a polyphonic symphony.”—Deema K. Shehabi, Michigan Quarterly Review Praise for Fady Joudah  “Joudah’s poetry thrives on dramatic shifts in perspective, on continually challenging received notions.”—The Guardian “A luminous aesthete who thinks in nuance, in refinements.”—Louise Glück “Joudah has been writing essential poetry for some time [. . .] forging a lyric that works at the crosscurrents of reportage, myth, and dream where falsely imagined boundaries―of gender, nation, family―fray and unfold. [. . .] Joudah’s gifts for articulating the intersections of bewilderment, tenderness, rage, and grief are fully alive.”―Mary Szybist “If you love poetry, or simply wonder what powerful poetry is and what it can do for you, then the poems of Fady Joudah are waiting for you.”—Rowan Ricardo Phillips “With a quiet certainty, Joudah names those ordinary things that hold everything in focus, grounded in a fabular mystery that resonates in the twenty-first century.”—Yusef Komunyakaa “Joudah’s poems defy classification, not because they perplex, but because of their remarkable power of synthesis. His mode is the lyric, with its concinnity and necessary music, but his lyrics compress, contain and then liberate the matter of narrative: allegory, fable, folktale, parable, documentary. He is a superb, seductive storyteller.”—Marilyn Hacker “Joudah examines his subject with an eye both clinical and caring, alert to the symptoms we don’t recognize or won’t admit we have. His language is like crystal: patterned, prismatic, sharp.”—Evie Shockley “Joudah is uniquely capable of crafting language that moves fluidly between lyrical abstraction and clinical precision [. . .] Like the stars its title invokes, Joudah’s latest is mysterious and ruminative.”—Library Journal, Starred Review “Joudah’s mission is perhaps to spiritualize our minds, and to catch the heart in its deepest modes of thinking, and the outcome is lyric of the highest order.”―Khaled Mattawa “Joudah uses language both rich and fiercely honed to consider the sweeping universe and our sometimes troublesome place in it.”—Library Journal “A doctor, Joudah reads bodies like texts, illuminating their stories [. . . and] bringing a loving precision to his descriptions.”—Minneapolis Star Tribune  “Joudah’s poems are driven by a delight in all aspects of language. [. . . This] is the work of a restless poetic mind whose inventive and capacious poems bring wonder and skepticism and incandescent language to bear on questions of human experience.”—The Rumpus “Supple [. . .] We often say that poetry transforms, but Joudah’s verse also transports.”—The Millions “Joudah is a remarkable poet of great intellect and vision. [. . . His] thought-provoking and imaginative juxtapositions shine.”—Arkansas International


Praise for […] “This is a text designed to disarm and unsettle. To embody the erased, the unsayable. The reader is here to do the labor of listening: Listen to the Palestinian speak. Equally, listen to their silence. Listen when you understand; when you don’t—listen.”—AGNI “Joudah’s […] offers a stunning magnification of consciousness that undertakes the work suggested by the title: reembodying in the text—beautifully, painfully—what has been systematically removed.”— Rosalie Moffett, Los Angeles Review of Books  “Within [...] pages, the poet’s voice travels across centuries and continents, historicizing the fate of the Palestinian people while illuminating the bewilderment, eros, and spirituality of everyday life. Joudah’s integrity and craftsmanship elasticize the boundaries of the lyric and embrace a reckoning with colonial violence. But these glimmering, layered poems defy easy categorization, even as they brim with the wisdom we inherit from the dead.”—Aria Aber, Yale Review “One of the most astounding moves Joudah makes in this collection is simply to contradict himself, to let the poem establish a reality and then take it away.”—Joyelle McSweeney, Words Without Borders Praise for Tethered to Stars  “This is what we have had to do, amid pandemic, grief, political chaos, fires, human rights disasters: continue on with our lives. Doing chores [. . .] taking walks [. . .] teaching kids [. . .] trying to stay steady. In his brilliant forthcoming book, Tethered to Stars, Fady Joudah writes about the mysterious cosmos swirling with intricate linkages—as his phone is pinging. Ah, yes, Jerusalem, the Holy City! Right now, let’s call all our cities holy. Let’s hope our trees continue to communicate, whatever humans can or can’t accomplish.”—Naomi Shihab Nye, New York Times Magazine “True to its title, Joudah’s collection of poems musically connects the body to the Earth and the Earth to the stars [. . .] It’s earthy and ethereal, as we are.”—Houston Chronicle “Joudah centers his fifth poetry collection on the 12 star signs and other astrological phenomena, blending his physician's penchant for precision and the poet's ear for lyricism [. . .] What shines most brightly here is Joudah's ability to render extended imagery that plays out over several poems. An uprooted oak in one poem creates a place to plant olive pits in another. Dandelion and sunflower florets populate the pages. Butterflies lay eggs in lemon trees and enchant speakers from afar [. . .] Another stellar entry in this poet's expansive body of work.”—Booklist “This is a treatise on cosmic unity that does not shy away from grief, but that yearns for the immense, abstract sense of possibility, believing that ‘a heart remains a heart in its beyond’ [. . .] The clarity of Joudah’s imagery is countered by a complex choral voice that feels at turns analytical and biblical in its rise and fall. Each poem seems to be spoken from various perspectives, the roving voices echoing and replacing one another in their observations until both the speaker and addressee dissolve. ‘You’ll be everywhere,’ one poem closes. Joudah offers a nuanced vision of what connects man to the cosmos in this deeply searching book.”—Publishers Weekly “The poems in this brilliant book themselves stand beside our own sadnesses and grow large in our imaginations, like trees. [. . .] These poems, many among Joudah’s finest so far, are as intimate as the night sky.”—McSweeney’s “So much of Tethered to Stars grapples with what is difficult to understand. From the nature of stars to racial tension, mortality, and his own cultural heritage, Joudah uses his lyricism to attempt to uncover life's mysteries. This collection deals with these complex and inexplicable topics, and yet it does so in a way that never abandons its tenderness, curiosity, and admiration for the beauty of the world.”—The West Review “The poems in Fady Joudah’s Tethered to Stars reflect a poet’s pinnacle, where readers experience the vision of a virtuosic poet who possesses multiple registers and allusive riches, transforming them into a polyphonic symphony.”—Deema K. Shehabi, Michigan Quarterly Review Praise for Fady Joudah  “Joudah’s poetry thrives on dramatic shifts in perspective, on continually challenging received notions.”—The Guardian “A luminous aesthete who thinks in nuance, in refinements.”—Louise Glück “Joudah has been writing essential poetry for some time [. . .] forging a lyric that works at the crosscurrents of reportage, myth, and dream where falsely imagined boundaries―of gender, nation, family―fray and unfold. [. . .] Joudah’s gifts for articulating the intersections of bewilderment, tenderness, rage, and grief are fully alive.”―Mary Szybist “If you love poetry, or simply wonder what powerful poetry is and what it can do for you, then the poems of Fady Joudah are waiting for you.”—Rowan Ricardo Phillips “With a quiet certainty, Joudah names those ordinary things that hold everything in focus, grounded in a fabular mystery that resonates in the twenty-first century.”—Yusef Komunyakaa “Joudah’s poems defy classification, not because they perplex, but because of their remarkable power of synthesis. His mode is the lyric, with its concinnity and necessary music, but his lyrics compress, contain and then liberate the matter of narrative: allegory, fable, folktale, parable, documentary. He is a superb, seductive storyteller.”—Marilyn Hacker “Joudah examines his subject with an eye both clinical and caring, alert to the symptoms we don’t recognize or won’t admit we have. His language is like crystal: patterned, prismatic, sharp.”—Evie Shockley “Joudah is uniquely capable of crafting language that moves fluidly between lyrical abstraction and clinical precision [. . .] Like the stars its title invokes, Joudah’s latest is mysterious and ruminative.”—Library Journal, Starred Review “Joudah’s mission is perhaps to spiritualize our minds, and to catch the heart in its deepest modes of thinking, and the outcome is lyric of the highest order.”―Khaled Mattawa “Joudah uses language both rich and fiercely honed to consider the sweeping universe and our sometimes troublesome place in it.”—Library Journal “A doctor, Joudah reads bodies like texts, illuminating their stories [. . . and] bringing a loving precision to his descriptions.”—Minneapolis Star Tribune  “Joudah’s poems are driven by a delight in all aspects of language. [. . . This] is the work of a restless poetic mind whose inventive and capacious poems bring wonder and skepticism and incandescent language to bear on questions of human experience.”—The Rumpus “Supple [. . .] We often say that poetry transforms, but Joudah’s verse also transports.”—The Millions “Joudah is a remarkable poet of great intellect and vision. [. . . His] thought-provoking and imaginative juxtapositions shine.”—Arkansas International


Praise for Tethered to Stars  “This is what we have had to do, amid pandemic, grief, political chaos, fires, human rights disasters: continue on with our lives. Doing chores [. . .] taking walks [. . .] teaching kids [. . .] trying to stay steady. In his brilliant forthcoming book, Tethered to Stars, Fady Joudah writes about the mysterious cosmos swirling with intricate linkages—as his phone is pinging. Ah, yes, Jerusalem, the Holy City! Right now, let’s call all our cities holy. Let’s hope our trees continue to communicate, whatever humans can or can’t accomplish.”—Naomi Shihab Nye, New York Times Magazine “True to its title, Joudah’s collection of poems musically connects the body to the Earth and the Earth to the stars [. . .] It’s earthy and ethereal, as we are.”—Houston Chronicle “Joudah centers his fifth poetry collection on the 12 star signs and other astrological phenomena, blending his physician's penchant for precision and the poet's ear for lyricism [. . .] What shines most brightly here is Joudah's ability to render extended imagery that plays out over several poems. An uprooted oak in one poem creates a place to plant olive pits in another. Dandelion and sunflower florets populate the pages. Butterflies lay eggs in lemon trees and enchant speakers from afar [. . .] Another stellar entry in this poet's expansive body of work.”—Booklist “This is a treatise on cosmic unity that does not shy away from grief, but that yearns for the immense, abstract sense of possibility, believing that ‘a heart remains a heart in its beyond’ [. . .] The clarity of Joudah’s imagery is countered by a complex choral voice that feels at turns analytical and biblical in its rise and fall. Each poem seems to be spoken from various perspectives, the roving voices echoing and replacing one another in their observations until both the speaker and addressee dissolve. ‘You’ll be everywhere,’ one poem closes. Joudah offers a nuanced vision of what connects man to the cosmos in this deeply searching book.”—Publishers Weekly “The poems in this brilliant book themselves stand beside our own sadnesses and grow large in our imaginations, like trees. [. . .] These poems, many among Joudah’s finest so far, are as intimate as the night sky.”—McSweeney’s “So much of Tethered to Stars grapples with what is difficult to understand. From the nature of stars to racial tension, mortality, and his own cultural heritage, Joudah uses his lyricism to attempt to uncover life's mysteries. This collection deals with these complex and inexplicable topics, and yet it does so in a way that never abandons its tenderness, curiosity, and admiration for the beauty of the world.”—The West Review “The poems in Fady Joudah’s Tethered to Stars reflect a poet’s pinnacle, where readers experience the vision of a virtuosic poet who possesses multiple registers and allusive riches, transforming them into a polyphonic symphony.”—Deema K. Shehabi, Michigan Quarterly Review Praise for Fady Joudah  “Joudah’s poetry thrives on dramatic shifts in perspective, on continually challenging received notions.”—The Guardian “A luminous aesthete who thinks in nuance, in refinements.”—Louise Glück “Joudah has been writing essential poetry for some time [. . .] forging a lyric that works at the crosscurrents of reportage, myth, and dream where falsely imagined boundaries―of gender, nation, family―fray and unfold. [. . .] Joudah’s gifts for articulating the intersections of bewilderment, tenderness, rage, and grief are fully alive.”―Mary Szybist “If you love poetry, or simply wonder what powerful poetry is and what it can do for you, then the poems of Fady Joudah are waiting for you.”—Rowan Ricardo Phillips “With a quiet certainty, Joudah names those ordinary things that hold everything in focus, grounded in a fabular mystery that resonates in the twenty-first century.”—Yusef Komunyakaa “Joudah’s poems defy classification, not because they perplex, but because of their remarkable power of synthesis. His mode is the lyric, with its concinnity and necessary music, but his lyrics compress, contain and then liberate the matter of narrative: allegory, fable, folktale, parable, documentary. He is a superb, seductive storyteller.”—Marilyn Hacker “Joudah examines his subject with an eye both clinical and caring, alert to the symptoms we don’t recognize or won’t admit we have. His language is like crystal: patterned, prismatic, sharp.”—Evie Shockley “Joudah is uniquely capable of crafting language that moves fluidly between lyrical abstraction and clinical precision [. . .] Like the stars its title invokes, Joudah’s latest is mysterious and ruminative.”—Library Journal, Starred Review “Joudah’s mission is perhaps to spiritualize our minds, and to catch the heart in its deepest modes of thinking, and the outcome is lyric of the highest order.”―Khaled Mattawa “Joudah uses language both rich and fiercely honed to consider the sweeping universe and our sometimes troublesome place in it.”—Library Journal “A doctor, Joudah reads bodies like texts, illuminating their stories [. . . and] bringing a loving precision to his descriptions.”—Minneapolis Star Tribune  “Joudah’s poems are driven by a delight in all aspects of language. [. . . This] is the work of a restless poetic mind whose inventive and capacious poems bring wonder and skepticism and incandescent language to bear on questions of human experience.”—The Rumpus “Supple [. . .] We often say that poetry transforms, but Joudah’s verse also transports.”—The Millions “Joudah is a remarkable poet of great intellect and vision. [. . . His] thought-provoking and imaginative juxtapositions shine.”—Arkansas International


Author Information

Fady Joudah is the author of […]. He has also published six collections of poems: The Earth in the Attic; Alight; Textu, a book-long sequence of short poems whose meter is based on cellphone character count; Footnotes in the Order of Disappearance; and Tethered to Stars. He has translated several collections of poetry from the Arabic and is the co-editor and co-founder of the Etel Adnan Poetry Prize. He was a winner of the Yale Series of Younger Poets competition in 2007 and has received the Jackson Poetry Prize, a PEN award, a Banipal/Times Literary Supplement prize from the UK, the Griffin Poetry Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the Arab American Book Award. He lives in Houston, with his wife and kids, where he practices internal medicine.

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