Pet Sounds
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- ¥1,500
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- ¥1,500
発行者による作品情報
A book of unruly love poems about complicated sexuality, precarity, and kinship
Working from the sticky interface of property and sex, Stephanie Young takes up the question of passing when narrow definitions of family on offer by the law and capitalist social relations leave out so much. With a cast of characters that includes lovers and exes, Troilus and Cressida, Van Morrison and the Grateful Dead, Steph Curry and Andre Iguodala, Pat Parker and Judy Grahn, the orca Tilikum and his captors, Pet Sounds is at once a book of confessional economics, music criticism disguised as poetry, and a complicated coming out story. These poems pulse with the pleasures and grief of making a home inside structures that don’t fit—on land whose value climbs ever upward in the frenzy of speculation.
2020 LAMBDA LITERARY AWARD WINNER
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In her fourth book, Young (Ursula or University) explores the complexities of sexual relations in a capitalist society. Throughout, she alludes to diverse cultural artifacts, among them Troilus and Cressida, the music of Van Morrison and the Grateful Dead, and the orca Tilikum and his captors. "I'm quick to reconcile difference," the speaker says. True to form, these poems often read as efforts to resolve contradictions through narrative (the speaker's own coming-out story, for instance), an endeavor that proves at turns self-conscious, parodic, and deadly serious. "Unmake that problem," the speaker proclaims, evoking the power of counternarratives, while elsewhere, she admits: "the path direct, had failed to keep it." As Young delves into the philosophy of sex and love, the poems are often abstract rather than grounded in tangibles, a choice that may strike some readers as discordant with the content of the poems. In "Congenital," she writes, "dispossession and constraint// the shape our togetherness took/ not exactly our decision/ not exactly not." Young examines both individual powerlessness and complicity, offering a complex and rewarding framework for contradiction.