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Spiral of Silence
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 200

Spiral of Silence

Elvira Sánchez-Blake's shattering testimonial novel, Spiral of Silence, breaks thirty-year silences about the traumatizing impact of Colombia's civil war, and centers on the experiences of women who move through hopelessness, loss, and grief during this volatile era in Latin American history. A multigenerational epic, Spiral of Silence (Espiral de Silencios) opens in the early 1980s, as peace and amnesty agreements spark optimism and hope. We meet Norma, a privileged, upper-class woman who is married to an army general; Maria Teresa (Mariate), a young rebel who loves a guerrilla fighter and navigates commitments to motherhood and revolutionary activism; and Amparo, a woman who comes of age ...

An Insignificant Family
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 296

An Insignificant Family

Beginning in Vietnam shortly after the end of the American war this volume follows the life of Nguyen Thi My Tiep, a woman writer and a revolutionary, whose girlhood is spent as a guerrilla fighter, and whose post-war life becomes a search for personal liberation and individual love.

Poetry Like Bread
  • Language: es
  • Pages: 300

Poetry Like Bread

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1994
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  • Publisher: Unknown

An anthology of political poems by 33 poets from around the world. They write on war, poverty and hunger, as well as love of fellow man and the loneliness of revolutionary life.

Zapata's Disciple
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 166

Zapata's Disciple

In his first collection of essays, award-winning poet Martín Espada turns his fierce critical eye toward a broad range of urgent political and cultural issues. With the same insight and integrity displayed in his poetry, he chronicles many struggles of the Latino community: the myths and realities of machismo, the backlash against Latino immigrants and the Spanish language, the borders of racism, and U.S. colonialism in Puerto Rico. Espada's poetry has survived everything from censorship by National Public Radio to a bomb threat at a reading. In his essay "All Things Censored," he describes how NPR commissioned him to write a poem, then refused to air the work because of its political conte...

Halting Steps
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 330

Halting Steps

Halting Steps represents the most complete single-volume retrospective in English of Claribel Alegr a's seven-decade career. The volume collects all of Alegr a's poems from her fourteen previously published books and debuts several new poems under the title "Otherness." Alegr a was born in Nicaragua during the United States occupation of that country. Alegr a's family opposed the occupation and moved to El Salvador, where she grew up. Her poetry is not only lyrical and introspective but also po-litically engaged. Her verse has always spoken forcefully, specifically, and fearlessly to matters of social justice in her region. She strikes a universal theme, however, in giving a voice to individ...

The Place of Stones
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 242

The Place of Stones

Finalist, 2018 John Gardner Fiction prize The Place of Stones is Ali Hosseini’s newly translated first novel, his second book to appear in English. In it, he paints a vivid portrait of Sangriz, a village in the southern part of Iran where life has been disrupted by industrialization and the revolution of 1979. Haydar and Jamal are best friends, and their families have always made their living from the land in the foothills of Iran’s Zagros Mountains. Haydar is a dreamer who searches the hills for an ancient treasure called the Black Globe. Jamal is in love with Haydar’s sister, Golandam, and he attempts to accommodate himself to modernization as a way to create a better life for the two of them. The rapacious conversion of farmland to brick factories draws the trio into escalating conflict with the village landlord. As Jamal, Haydar, and their families confront land reform, industrialization, revolution, and war, their lives are pulled forcefully toward the explosive events that will change them all. In masterfully crafted prose that never sinks into sentimentality, The Place of Stones illuminates how a lost past continues to shape the present.

Rethinking Our Classrooms, Volume 2
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 255

Rethinking Our Classrooms, Volume 2

None

Small Hours of the Night
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 244

Small Hours of the Night

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1996
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Named one of the outstanding translations of 1996 by the American Literary Translators Association. One of the greatest figures in Central American letters of this century. His genius is transcendent. --Arturo Arias. [Dalton's poetry illustrates] his profound conviction that the poet can and must, in his life as in his work, serve as the finely-honed scalpel of change, both in word and deed. --Claribel Alegría. This man's work hits me harder than springtime. --E. Ethelbert Miller. A great gift to American poetry. --The Boston Globe.

Stomp and Sing
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 96

Stomp and Sing

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2005
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Jon Andersen's debut book of poems, Stomp and Sing, illuminates the concerns and aspirations of the new working-class generation. Andersen's image-studded lyrics about work, love, family and class struggle create a vivid narrative that traces the concerns and aspirations of young people facing the challenges of daily life in a turbulent century. These are clear, direct poems that take us from mountaintops to local cafes, from lumberyards to town sidewalks, and range in theme from the impact of racism to the consolation of nature. Postcard from Chimney Pond Climbed the talus around the pond last night-so many pebbles around a puddle from the views of Baxter Peak, but down here chunks of granite as big as the small house I grew up in, all jumbled, jutting out of cold, clear water and piled up towards the stars. Silent lightning split the sky far north. Scrambled as far up the rock throat as I safely could and then some. Slept beneath the cliffs. Had a dream of you so real that for a long time after waking up, it felt good to have seen you again.

Clean Slate
  • Language: es
  • Pages: 200

Clean Slate

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1993
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Daisy Zamora's poems resound with life. Commitment. Struggle. Love. She had been a fighter for the liberation of Nicaragua and took a an active role in reshaping the country. Her poems appear here together with their English translations by Margaret Randall and Elinor Randall.