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frank and honest poems concerned with the self, feminine identity, multilingualism and language, and family/parenthood/childhood. enjoyed a lot of these poems. looking forward to teaching some of them, especially to Spanish-speaking students.
So much language play and lithe connection. These poems showed me graceful in a way I hadn’t thought about. I think I have a crush on the thoughts that these poems grew from.
This is a beautiful book. Strongly advise you add Eloisa Amezcua to your reading list and bookshelf.
I'm still thinking it over. I think there were strong poems in this one, but based off the reviews I expected more on identity and the use of Spanish. However, I did like the vulnerability in this. I might have to read this one again. Also, the square formatting and pages with only 1-4 lines was annoying me to no end, because it just felt like a waster of paper and huge distraction.
A sparkling debut collection that embraces and revels in the contradictions inherent in our existences. The poems can be explosive, driving, or can slowly unfold with exceptional precision. They explore the need for companionship alongside requiring solitude to know oneself; desire on one hand and a wielded anger on the other. They play on the taut thread of the speaker and her family’s Spanish and English. And they are so tuned into where they, and the speaker, came from, while gazing intently
Tender and incisive in equal measure.
a pleasure to read. Vulnerable yet strong and beautiful. Perfectly executed. Hats off to this exciting poet.
Eloisa Amezcua’s debut poetry collection, “From The Inside Quietly” (Shelterbelt Press, 2018), the inaugural winner of the Shelterbelt Poetry Prize selected by Ada Limón, cracks open the concepts of identity, language, perspective, persona, and voice with a blend of observation, confession, reflection, and a fierce gaze on the world. There is a curious lens in these poems that creates distance and, simultaneously, invitation. Observe, but don’t touch. Get closer, but understand, the universal le...
(on pain):the world becomes impossiblytender like fingers swollenpapules of foreign materiallodged in the bodyto be unroofed orleft there to dissolve
I see why Ada Limon chose this debut poetry collection to win the Shelterbelt Poetry Prize. I’ve discovered some new favorites here. Persistent themes include the female body (often in relation to the male), love, immigration, and health concerns. A couple thought-provoking lines:This is how I was / taught to love: / to silence yourself / is to let the other in. andYou told me that falling in love / with someone new was just falling / in love with yourself over and over again.
I adore Eloisa's poems. This book blooms through the body, examining what it means to be a contemporary woman, and how our lineage--whether familial/genetic/cultural, whether a string of interactions with the lover, the reader, other authors--creates our sense of self.
Eloisa Amezcua’s From the Inside Quietly has a voice that asks its hearer to articulate what is missing from readers elsewhere. I don’t know how to prove it. Does beauty know beauty is a shortcut? From text messages to auto correct, from theoretically falling cats to the dry worship of things relayed with no inflection, Amezcua collects communique to salvage the non-dueling songs of hurt and heal while acknowledging with soul how being has to suffer the body’s abridgement. If often formed from t...