National Book Award, 2023 Longlist * "Elegiac and shot through with righteous anger, this essential collection demands a national reckoning."--Publishers W...
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-Last updated on 12 Jan, 2026
ISBN-10:
1556596561
ISBN-13:
9781556596568
Publisher
Copper Canyon Press
Dimensions
9.10 X 7.40 X 0.90 inches
Language
English
Nominee | 2023 | National Book Awards
ISBN-10
:1556596561
ISBN-13
:9781556596568
Publisher
:Copper Canyon Press
Publication date
: 02 May, 2023
Category
: Poetry
Sub-Category
Format
:PAPERBACK
Language
:English
Reading Level
: All
No. of Units
:1
Dimension
: 9.10 X 7.40 X 0.90 inches
Weight
:395 g
National Book Award, 2023 Longlist
"Paisley Rekdal has always been a breathtakingly ambitious poet, and this is her most ambitious book so far-a work of seamlessly blended poetry and history. In lyric poems in many forms and spoken through many voices, as well as in corresponding essays, Rekdal traces and grieves the sorrowful politics that link the building of the transcontinental railroad and the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 ('Congress had to pass an act/ to make the building stop'). She excavates an American shame that has yet to be reckoned with, though this extraordinary book, which finds a fresh purpose for poetry as a reliquary of evidence, perhaps makes a start."--Craig Morgan Teicher, NPR "Books We Love 2023"
"A fluid, striking blend of poetry and essay that limns the railroad workers, the treatment of Chinese immigrants, environmental devastation, and the fate of immigrants everywhere: 'What is freedom/ butthe power to choose/ where you won't die?'"--Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal, Best Poetry of 2023
"An illuminating book by Utah's former poet laureate Paisley Rekdal that commemorates the 150th anniversary of the transcontinental railroad. Asian, Irish and African American workers' voices are brought into heightened relief in this collection, as Rekdal asks the question, 'Is American history forward, progressive, recursive, or is it spiraling?'"--Terry Tempest Williams, New York Times
"Through these poems, readers are asked to wrestle with the complex, layered histories of race, creed, class, and gender that are all too often overlooked in monolithic presentations of America's past and present. Elegiac and shot through with righteous anger, this essential collection demands a national reckoning."--Publishers Weekly, STARRED REVIEW
"A captivating, extensively researched book blending poetry and essays, told from the perspective of the railroad workers while focusing on the lives and treatment of Chinese migrants and the devastation to the environment during the building process. . . . A remarkable collection offering history not typically told in textbooks."--Library Journal
"Rekdal mixes the documentary and the speculative to assemble a wide range of histories that originated in the transcontinental railroad. Another way of saying this is that Rekdal deploys the formal techniques of appropriation, collage, and speculation to translate the silences of the archive. . . . In a sense, West is a book of ghosts--not the white-sheeted apparitions of the popular imagination but specters of the past that flicker imperceptibly in the present, shaping our lives in ways we cannot grapple with until we recognize them."--Teow Lim Goh, Los Angeles Review of Books
"In West, Rekdal elaborately translates an elegy carved into a wall at Angel Island Immigration Station (where at least five hundred thousand Chinese migrants were detained between 1910-1940) through poetry, essay, video, and fragments of historical records to offer a complex and nuanced portrait of the American West. As much a research project as a work of literature, West reveals the layered histories and overlapping narratives of the region and its peoples. For Paisley, the triumphalism that marked the railroad's construction often overshadows the histories of violence, exploitation, and discrimination that continue to reverberate into the present day."--Kenneth Tam, BOMB
"West: A Translation is a hybrid collection of poems and lyric essays inspired by an anonymous carving at a detention center in San Francisco eulogizing a Chinese migrant who died there by suicide. Informed by historical artifacts and her own family's history, Rekdal presents a translation of the anonymous poem followed by "notes" that contextualize the completion of the first transcontinental railroad, built during the Chinese Exclusion Act."--National Book Award Longlist Citation
"Reflects on American unity and division in poems that adopt multiple voices, languages, and forms and are juxtaposed with historical images."--Publishers Weekly, Spring 2023 Announcements
"The powerful latest poetry and essay collection by Utah poet laureate Rekdal tells the story of the transcontinental railroad through the voices of the workers who built it. . . . Each piece offers a unique and evocative perspective, portraying migrant workers, railroad tycoons, labor activists, and politicians, among many others. . . . There is an accompanying website with companion videos and audio to enhance an already immersive and stunning collection. A must-have for libraries."--Allison Escoto, Booklist, STARRED REVIEW
"Astonishing in scope and intelligence, its ambitions are as vast as the nineteenth-century frontier and the dreams for American empire. West is Rekdal's eleventh book, and it is nothing less than an extraordinary explication of what it means, and what it costs, to document history."--Lynnell Edwardss, Good River Review
"A daring and serious attempt to move from a work of online art to a book, pushing at the inherited limitations of both."--Jesse Nathan, McSweeney's
"Rekdal forges a meaningful intersection of translation and documentary poetics. Rekdal's essays and the companion website further contextualize and complicate, but it is the poems themselves that reveal the magnitude of this history."--Rebecca Morgan Frank, Harriet Books at Poetry Foundation
"Part oral history, part 'translation, ' in which [Rekdal] turns the American sentence into a document of witness."--Diane Mehta, Electric Lit
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