What Small Sound

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4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
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Product Details
Price
$22.00  $20.46
Publisher
Red Hen Press
Publish Date
Pages
96
Dimensions
6.1 X 9.1 X 0.7 inches | 0.7 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781636280790

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About the Author
Francesca Bell is a poet and translator. Her debut collection, Bright Stain (Red Hen Press 2019), was a finalist for the Washington State Book Award and the Julie Suk Award. Her work appears widely in literary journals, and she has received a Neil Postman Award for Metaphor from Rattle and an Honorable Mention in Nimrod's Pablo Neruda Poetry Prize. Bell grew up in Washington and Idaho and did not complete middle school, high school, or college. She lives with her family in Novato, CA.
Reviews
"A moving and musical set of poetic works." --Kirkus Reviews (starred)

Francesca Bell's book What Small Sound is gorgeous, raw, and disarmingly honest beginning to end. Her poems encompass the scope of her life, her family's life, plus her generous and empathetic assessment of the larger world. She writes of a struggle to be "normal" in the fiery, broken, unpredictable chaos she sees around her. With skill and passion, she speaks of love, of rape, of deafness, or of holding still for a tarantula, of why she doesn't drink, of who left fingerprints on the bullets of the Las Vegas shooter, or of a mammogram that made her think of the Mars rover. Two quotes of hers from very different poems are unforgettable: "I can't navigate to a life of before / and keep falling face-flat against after." And still: "I want to feel what's next / curled inside me, tight as fists." Read this book. You will keep wanting to find what's after, and you won't forget any of it.
--Susan Terris, author of Familiar Tense


Francesca Bell's poems fish wonder and gratitude and eros from a world brushed by grief and illness and violence. I celebrate this poet's tender commitments to remaining open, especially after loss and even when tragedy triggers an instinct to shelter or retreat. In this way, Bell turns our degrees of separation into songs for contact. The poetic praying found in What Small Sound feels like the grace our moment needs.
--Geffrey Davis, author of Night Angler