Visitations
Poems
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- Encomenda
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- Data prevista: 7 de abr. de 2026
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- R$ 77,90
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- Encomenda
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- R$ 77,90
Descrição da editora
Julia Alvarez returns to her first love, poetry, in her latest collection, with scintillating poems drawn from all the seasons of her life, from childhood to the years of silver.
“Visitations is a cause for celebration. The first book of poems by Julia Alvarez in over twenty years braids miracles and mourning, infused with the compassion that characterizes all the work of this resplendent writer.” —Martín Espada, National Book Award-winning author of Jailbreak of Sparrows
In these poems, Alvarez traces her life gently, a fingertip following lines on a page, through memories of her childhood in the Dominican Republic, a dictatorship dramatically survived, the smells of sancocho and sofrito, the formative influence of her tías and her sisters, her move to America and the challenges of learning English, the search for mental health and beauty, redemption and success. We meet her grandchild and her mother, her lovers, visit the homes where she grew up and the homes where she grew into the formidable writer read in thousands of classrooms across America today. Her wisdom is as clear and beautiful as the light that shines through glass and yet grounded through the form and substance of self-knowing.
Told with a storyteller’s intimacy and the comfort of a warm hearth, this is a master writer’s reflection on family, aging, love, the body, having a voice, and the very act of composing poetry itself, experienced across the arc of decades—a collection of searching for an artistic voice, for the author’s very essence, until, “the way it sometimes happens: we arrive / where we were promised, belong to / what we longed for in ourselves, each other.”
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In her prismatic fourth collection, novelist, memoirist, and poet Alvarez (The Woman I Kept to Myself) spins richly detailed micro-narratives of her childhood in the Dominican Republic in the 1950s, her young adulthood in New York City, and beyond. Vivid scenes include reciting poems for her mother's guests while wearing "a pink party dress with a flaring crinoline" and attending the American embassy school, where she felt excluded by the teacher: "He seldom called on us natives/ with our caramel skin, unruly hair/ wetted and tightly braided." Later, in New York, she recalls immersing herself in books when her father would drop her off at the library while he looked for work: "This was the trade-off for coming to America:/ you became as small as the country you came from/ a speck on an ocean I could cover with my thumb." Alvarez brings her trademark humor to vulnerable scenes, as in "At the Mental Health Clinic Waiting Room," where the speaker, struggling with "the old bout of self-doubt," observes the scene around her: "The schizophrenic skims/ her People, the paranoid broods/ over a breast brochure, god bless/ the anorexic feasting on her nails." The result is a vivid and arresting volume.