Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Alight

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

The poems in Alight alternate between the estranging familial and strangely familiar, between burning and illumination. As father, husband, and physician, Fady Joudah gives children and vulnerable others voice in this hauntingly lyrical collection, where, with quiet ferociousness, one's self can be reclaimed from suffering's grip over mind and spirit.

Fady Joudah is a Palestinian-American poet, Translated by, and physician of internal medicine. He received his medical training from the Medical College of Georgia and University of Texas, and served with Doctors Without Borders in 2002 and 2005. His first book, The Earth in the Attic, won the 2007 Yale Series of Younger Poets competition, judged by Louise Glück. In 2010 he received a PEN translation award for his translations of Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish.


|

Joudah, an ER physician who worked with Doctors Without Borders, is a master storyteller who refuses to dramatize or withhold

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from June 24, 2013
      “Our age is a checkpoint” writes Joudah (winner of the 2007 Yale Series of Younger Poets) in his second collection. These deeply unsettling poems draw from Joudah’s work as a physician with Doctors Without Borders, evoking the fight for survival through enjambed lines that lack punctuation. Inefficient bureaucracy and preventable death haunt these lines: “I was trying to listen to your baby’s heartbeat/ With a gadget a century old.” The violence in the collection proves bipartite: political unrest the land is subject to, “Where the rebels came and went/ And ran into the government boys// Her girl’s femur the size of the bullet,” and the violence of illness resulting from lack of medical care. Even the animal kingdom is inflected through this lens, “caterpillars that eat their mothers and taxed pronouns.” Joudah conveys suffering without foregoing lyricism, unearthing striking linguistic combinations—“Humvee probability,” “pregnant mistletoes”—that enact a physician’s precision and a poet’s descriptive prowess. The winding nature of these poems suggests the lasting nature of the struggle described, the lack of resolution or reprieve: “To seduce memory/ into song/ to twist it/ in a twister county,” “To pray surrounded by guards/ to pray to the guards or/ to the invisible gods in the guards or the one surrounding the guards.”

    • Booklist

      May 15, 2013
      Raised abroad by Palestinian parents, Joudah returned to his native Texas to practice medicine and compose poetry. When Louise Glck selected his debut, The Earth in the Attic (2008), for the Yale Younger Poets Prize, she recognized its subjects as characterized by crisis and transience and alluded to Joudah's desire to suture the disjointed experience of exile. Here Joudah continues to examine the role his dual vocations play in his own sense of ancestral displacement, and he moves as easily from a Moorish synagogue in Prague to Gaza's colonial groves, rows of eucalyptus trees / The British had planted. With anatomical precision, Joudah illustrates scenes that are at once uncanny and contemporary, be it a Bedouin woman's lavender mourning veil, the chrome doors to an alchemist's home, or the mysterious speaker in Smoke, who exits abruptly and claims to have scripts to write and scrolls to find, a testament to the duties of attending physician and displaced poet alike. In both roles, Joudah has records to keep and history to revisit, and does so beautifully.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

subjects

Languages

  • English

Loading