A white woman navigates her fear and uncertainty to learn the ways of the people she called savages, until she begins to dream in Dakota, syllables sliding / on my tongue like tender
Second Place co-winner, Best Poetry, Latino Literary Hall of Fame, 2002
Rawly effective . . . Chávez has done careful historical research, and it lets her give stark details from many scenes of oppression. . .The poems' indignation, moral force and historical interest compel careful, engaged reading.
Publishers Weekly
A powerful, haunting, eloquent collection . . . This is first-rate narrative poetry from a poet who does her homework and understands the power of words-and history.
Tulsa World
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pieces of meat. An African man, on display as a cannibal at the World’s Columbian Exposition in 1893, sees into the future: humiliations heaped up / as on overfilled plates . . . / . . .
a country that casually / consumes its own. A woman holds the gray-blue barrel of a gun in her mouth, the taste familiar / as her own blood.
With an unexcelled command of narrative verse, Lisa Chávez tells the stories of American lives across more than a century. Whether retelling nineteenth-century captivity narratives or depicting
contemporary American women confronting addiction and despair, Chávez investigates issues of identity and self-definition in the face of an often harsh and unremitting history.
Her story-poems explore the ways in which people have been made captivewhether to racism or national policy, to bad marriages or alcoholism, to poverty or emotionfrom the Inuit woman
birthing a son among strangers to the wife now deranged by desire for another man: He’s the smoky slow-burn of chipotle on the tongue. My golden idol. My gospel revival. He’s hashish sweet and
languorousmy body’s one desire.
In the end, Chávez shows us a New World of promise in which an alchemist’s assistant summons stories from stones by calling their names with clicks of her tongue, / syllables of silver,
turquoise, and jade, and a Native woman discovers her true power in an Alaskan bar. Passionate and political, In an Angry Season is a work of startling depth and breadthan American
history in poetrythat asks us what it means to be civilized.
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