Brazen Creature
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- $13.99
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
Brazen Creature spans a young woman's awakening. The poems' concerns are twofold: violence against women and girls that has become rooted in the land, and verdant female desire and self-assertion in the face of entrenched oppression. In the poems' Midwestern towns and farmlands, patriarchy is a ghost that haunts the cottonwoods, soybean fields, and creek beds. The speaker is in limbo between fear and yearning, vulnerability and transgression, drought and flood, saving a life and needing to be saved.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Barngrover (Yell Hound Blues) embarks on a journey through hot, humid landscapes of lust and cruelty in her sophomore effort. The speakers of her poems cry out against violence that is perpetuated against women while they simultaneously reclaim their own desires and libidinous humanity. "A woman's home is her house and her house is her body," Barngrover writes in the opening poem. The intimacy of the line is paramount, with white space of the page serving as a severing tool: "I spend too much on too little// sympathy until there's none." A similar effect haunts the creeping escalation of lines in "Science of Uncertainty," in which the speaker confesses, "When he asked where/ I learned to kiss// that way, how could I say/ it was to keep// another man from leaving?" The entire collection snakes in this manner, like kudzu choking an abandoned building. Throughout, Barngrover both recognizes and rejects the inevitability of violence at the hands of an entrenched patriarchy: "Oh, charmer,/ I have learned your bright alphabet// of night-blooming flowers./ There will always be dirt in your nails// and smoke on your breath." Though rooted in violence, Barngrover's vital, nuanced collection displays a wit and sense of awareness borne of deep experience.