After Rubén bookcover

After Rubén

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Description

After Rubén is both trajectory and mosaic--a conversation around poetry in the Americas.

Product Details

PublisherRed Hen Press
Publish DateMay 05, 2020
Pages160
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781597098571
Dimensions8.6 X 5.9 X 0.5 inches | 0.5 pounds

About the Author

Francisco Aragón is the son of Nicaraguan immigrants. He is the author of Puerta del Sol and Glow of Our Sweat, as well as editor of The Wind Shifts: New Latino Poetry. His poems have appeared in twenty anthologies, most recently The Wandering Song: Central American Writing in the United States (Tia Chucha Press) and Nepantla: An Anthology Dedicated to Queer Poets of Color (Nightbook Books). Others include Inventions of Farewell: A Book of Elegies (W.W. Norton), Deep Travel: American Poets Abroad (Ninebark Press), and Poetry of Resistance: Voices for Social Justice (University of Arizona Press). In 2017, he was a finalist for Split This Rock's Freedom Plow Award for Poetry & Activism. A native of San Francisco, CA, he directs Letras Latinas, the literary initiative at the University of Notre Dame's Institute for Latino Studies. Aragón divides his time between Washington, D.C. and South Bend, IN.

Reviews

"Marvel at Francisco's new collection and translations of Daríiacute;o-there are soft, almost sepia-blurry portraits of unnamed figures, episodes, eras, and families. The Bay Area appears and dissolves as we journey with Aragóoacute;n--we amble shoulder to shoulder and listen to intimate, almost impossible short phrases and we stop on occasion and notice the silence, the separations, 'aflutter in the light."' The collaborations with the late Andréeacute;s Montoya and Carmen Calatayud, and verses inspired by Machado, Darío, Apollinaire, and Cendrars are stellar. This is a book made of books, cultures, and languages, a search made of searches--'I tried to invent new flowers, new tongues, ' it says--and indeed Francisco has accomplished this task. Rare for its intimate, deep voices and expansive, chromatic treks." --Juan Felipe Herrera, Poet Laureate of the United States (2015-2017)


"Consider all of this / an excursus on origins," advises Francisco Aragón as he invites the reader into the queer Latinx literary lineage in After Rubén. Comprised of equal parts familial and scholarly figures and conflicts, the depiction of Rubén Darío's poetic legacy in this collection reveals his lasting impact on Aragón, whose verse illuminates a range of complex and passionate lives. Aragón's translations (the originals are reproduced in an appendix) and ekphrastic re-visions of ten of Darío's poems are daring and, indeed, "blasphemous." --Carmen Giménez Smith, author of Cruel Futures and Be Recorder


"Part imagined intimate diary of the poet Rubén Darío, part lyrical exploration of the rich inner life of poet Aragón, this pulsating book is an ode to the between-world of those who live a life dedicated to observation of words. Sonically charged lines that delve into solitude, travel, separation, grief, and the complex life of the outsider allow these poems to speak both to the individual Latinx experience and the universal desire to belong, to be heard." --Ada Limón, author of The Carrying and Bright Dead Things

"After Rubén es una maravilla. Its elegant, lapidary poems are whispered, intoned, delivered like manifestos, or sung in halting measures that transmute the ephemera of memory and witness into the flashes and trails of glimpsed truths. Francisco Aragón, an American poet of uncommon ambition, has created a bejeweled puzzle box of a book, a fragmented Mariposa memoir of a childhood in between worlds, set within an homage to the poets whose inspirations helped him find his voice, all of which is interwoven in a celebration, an elegy--an interrogation--of the legacy of his greatest literary "mentor," the great Nicaraguan poet Rubén Darío. In this heady poetic idiom, bridging his home in San Francisco and scenes in Nicaragua with other places from his life in the States, Aragón's poetry hearkens again to the possibility of a poetics of las Americas, unbounded, unabashedly literary across cultures, languages, history, and journalism, unafraid to anatomize itself, and to regard and report the ever-shifting totalities of our Latinidad." --John Phillip Santos, author of Places Left Unfinished at the Time of Creation and The Farthest Home Is in an Empire of Fire


"What is remarkable about this book is Aragón's 'here, there, how' ('Cancíon')--the integration of histor

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