The Loneliest Girl: Poems (Mary Burritt Christiansen Poetry Series)

The Loneliest Girl: Poems (Mary Burritt Christiansen Poetry Series) image
ISBN-10:

0826363695

ISBN-13:

9780826363695

Author(s): Gale, Kate
Released: Feb 15, 2022
Format: Paperback, 88 pages
to view more data

Description:

Review\n"The Loneliest Girl is ultimately the story of all the lonely girls determining their own destiny, Kate Gale's defiant middle finger to the patriarchy."--Charles Remmelkamp, The Lake\n"Humble, hopeful, and defiantly human."--San Diego Tribune\n"'Medusa never took sexy back,' and neither does our poet, Kate Gale, though she grapples with abuse and daily sexist behavior at home. She has survived a cult, and poetry is one of her best weapons against being used again."--Marilyn Kallet, author of How Our Bodies Learned\n"When I open a new book by Kate Gale I know right away that there will be bravery. There will be a new take on mythology. There will be beautiful, skillful, memorable language that stands up and speaks up. And the pages fortify, they give strength. The Loneliest Girl is a brave, honest, and endlessly compelling book. Bravo."--Ilya Kaminsky, author of Dancing in Odessa and Deaf Republic: Poems\n"In lyrics of searching vulnerability, Kate Gale's poems excavate the unresolved tensions of contemporary womanhood--its dirt and broken sticks, its dark caves and burning lakes of memory. These poems hum with ancient music ("The cherry blossoms sing. Of wounding.") while drawing fresh complexity from the guiding constellation of classic myths and folklore. The Loneliest Girl is a rich, luminous offering from a keen lyric intelligence."--Kiki Petrosino, author of White Blood: A Lyric of Virginia\nWho was more alone than Medusa? Raped in Athena's temple, transformed into a monster, and banished into a cave, Medusa may be the ultimate example of victim blaming. In The Loneliest Girl, Kate Gale creates a powerful alternative narrative for Medusa and for all women who have carried guilt and shame--for being a woman, for not being enough, for being a victim. She offers a narrative in which women are the makers of the world--in which women find their way out from the cave of the Cisthene and into a world where they determine their own destiny.












We're an Amazon Associate. We earn from qualifying purchases at Amazon and all stores listed here.