Machete: Poems

Machete: Poems

by Tomás Q. Morín
Machete: Poems

Machete: Poems

by Tomás Q. Morín

Hardcover

$27.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

This fresh voice in American poetry wields lyric pleasure and well-honed insight against a cruel century that would kill us with a thousand cuts.
 
"Morín's writing uses the mundane details of everyday life...as a jumping-off point for creating fascinating and philosophical worlds." —LitHub

"Dios aprieta, pero no ahorca" ("God squeezes, but He doesn't strangle")—the epigraph of Machete—sets the stage for a powerful poet who summons a variety of ways to endure life when there's an invisible hand at your throat. Tomás Morín hails from the coastal plains of Texas, and explores a world where identity and place shift like that ever-changing shore.

In these poems, culture crashes like waves and leaves behind Billie Holiday and the CIA, disco balls and Dante, the Bible and Jerry Maguire. They are long, lean, and dazzle in their telling: "Whiteface" is a list of instructions for people stopped by the police; "Duct Tape" lauds our domestic life from the point of view of the tape itself.

One part Groucho Marx, one part Job, Morín considers our obsession with suffering—"the pain in which we trust"—and finds that the best answer to our predicament is sometimes anger, sometimes laughter, but always via the keen line between them that may be the sharpest weapon we have.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780593319642
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publication date: 10/12/2021
Pages: 96
Sales rank: 664,910
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

TOMÁS Q. MORÍN is the author of the memoir Let Me Count the Ways, forthcoming from University of Nebraska Press, as well as the poetry collections Patient Zero and A Larger Country. He is coeditor, with Mari L'Esperance, of the anthology Coming Close: Forty Essays on Philip Levine and translator of The Heights of Macchu Picchu by Pablo Neruda. He teaches at Rice University and Vermont College of Fine Arts. Morín lives with his family in Texas.

Read an Excerpt

I Sing the Body Aquatic


When I offer my sweaty hand in greeting
I can see the future. No matter how gently you squeeze, I know when our hands meet you will crowd my crooked index and pinkie fingers against their straight-as-an-arrow brothers so that my hand looks more like a fin than an appendage perfectly evolved for tying shoelaces or wiping a tear from the red face of the missionary who rode his bicycle under the sun all day to reach my porch.
When he takes my hand he won’t find hope or brotherhood or whatever he’s looking for. Because I can see the future at times like this and because I have an unshakable faith in the law of averages, I know when our hands embrace he’ll find proof of natural selection in the shape of my fingers, evolutionary holdovers from an era of gills when the earth was all aquarium and some distant relative with sleepy eyes and splayed fins who tired of being mocked by handsome carp said, To hell with it

Table of Contents

I

I Sing the Body Aquatic 3

112th Congress Blues 5

Whiteface 7

Weather Sayings 11

Machete 12

Extraordinary Rendition 13

Flea Circus 15

A Sigh 17

New Year's Eve 19

Sartana and Machete in Outer Space 21

Stanza 24

Life Preserver 25

II

Vallejo 29

Two Dolphins 32

Royal Silence 45

Goosestep 47

A Pile of Fish 48

Heretic That I Am 50

Tried and Untrue 52

Duct Tape 53

Miles Davis Stole My Soul 56

Machetes 59

Notes 73

Acknowledgments 75

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews