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Lovely
Asunder
Poems by Danielle Cadena Deulen
Winner
of the 2011 Miller Williams Poetry Prize |
This
debut collection enchants and haunts like an expensive perfume
Danielle
Cadena Deulen's debut collection, Lovely Asunder,
is filled with beautiful dangers. These poems, sharp and graceful,
brutal and vulnerable, create from language a kind of chiaroscuro-both
light and dark made more vivid by their juxtaposition. Throughout
the collection, the poet appraises ancient myths through a
feminine and feminist perspective, evincing the ways in which
narratives transform personal experience and vice versa. The
figure of the fruit, in all its implied and literal lushness,
recurs like a chorus, and the speakers of these poems are
haunted by the Fall-confined by
the body, the mind, and the irrevocable past. Yet there is
a certain abundance to Deulen's style that keeps darkness
or mere cynicism from overwhelming-a distinctly maximalist
aesthetic that echoes the
lost paradisal opulence for which the speakers of the poems
yearn. Worldly but never mundane, this collection exists in
the boundary between the physical and metaphysical, revering
both.
“Lovely
Asunder brims with poems of intense lyric beauty, confronting
the dark wealth of the human heart. ‘How do we know,
without words / to say it, that you are the summation of a
lifetime / of desire?’ Deulen asks in the poem ‘Interrogation’—we
can begin to know by reading this book.”
—Dana Levin, author of Wedding Day and In
the Surgical Theatre
“Lovely
Asunder delves into the grave depths of desire. Bristling
with passion, fierce in their self-scrutiny, these exquisite
poems tightrope between the intimate and the metaphysical.
At once lovely—beautiful, harmonious, inspiring—and
asunder—broken, fragmented, distinct—the poems
embody paradox with their elaborate and baroque music and
their austere and harrowing vision. ‘Lord,’ a
speaker asks in the poem ‘Hearth,’ ‘save
me from the ordinary world.’ The poet saves us from
the ordinary at every turn with her extraordinary juxtapositions,
with her uncanny images, and with her breathtaking ability
to see from original and oblique angles the world afresh in
all its seductive strangeness.”
—Eric Pankey, author of The Pear as One Example:
New and Selected Poems
“At
one point in her riveting new collection Deulen promises to
‘go / further inland, like a lenient / hurricane.’
I’d say she’s more of a lyric hurricane; wreaking
exquisite havoc on an imperfect world, she has the power to
excavate the ‘sound / we are born hearing, and so don’t
hear.’ Often, she faces pain head-on, like the songbird
in these two of the book’s many memorable lines: ‘A
goldfinch flies into briars, gets stuck / It quivers in there—little
glint of light.”
—Jacqueline Osherow, author of The Hoopoe’s
Crown
Danielle
Cadena Deulen
is a PhD candidate in English at the University of Utah. Her
book of essays, The Riots, is the winner of the 2010
AWP Award Series in Creative Nonfiction and is published by
the University of Georgia Press.
February
$16 paper
5 1/2 x 8 1/2, 90 pages
ISBN 978-1-55728-960-5
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