In the Good Years
Autor Laura Crestéen Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 sep 2025
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781961897564
ISBN-10: 1961897563
Pagini: 128
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.2 kg
Editura: FOUR WAY BOOKS
ISBN-10: 1961897563
Pagini: 128
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.2 kg
Editura: FOUR WAY BOOKS
Recenzii
"There are books that stain you long after you put them down. In the Good Years is one of these books; it haunts you, in the best ways, with its flea-ridden dogs, summers steeped in the self-knowledge of girlhood and honeybees and vexed familial lineages, the profound and profoundly painful moments of lives lived, shared, and shed. It's not hyperbolic (I hope) to say that the whole world is here—but unlike the actual world, Cresté's is cradled in pristine care, attention, and with language so deft and exact, it could have only been made."
—Ocean Vuong, author of On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous
"In the Good Years offers a stunning archaeological dig of language, time, and intimacy. Cresté's poems excavate tenderness and violence, the personal and the political, ecosystems and their destroyers, treasure and trash, history and the multiverse of futures contained therein. Each poem is a site of meticulous, gentle sifting, each line a careful curation of artifacts. Cresté's radical attention unearths and re-earths, restoring context to its discoveries and finding homes for the unhomed. Breathtaking."
—Tess Gunty, author of The Rabbit Hutch
"In In the Good Years, Laura Cresté forges a speaker attuned to historical and familial forces—a speaker ravenous for communion, a speaker who notices the distance between people, the gaps in history. Moving from childhood to adulthood, these poems radiate with a translucent interiority. I could feel the speaker's emotional and intellectual growth, setbacks. Each experience, each glimpse of the world is rendered in precise and resonant language. In the poems that hold the dead and disappeared in Argentina, Cresté deftly braids familial narratives, political violence, translation, guilt, and survival into a tour de force that jolts the senses. Laura Cresté is a remarkable poet. I'm thankful for her first book."
—Eduardo C. Corral, author of Guillotine
"'Airplanes from opposite windows in their twin beds.' 'Bright smear across spoiled film,' with 'no / choice left but to let the lit world in.' 'The sea out of the sea.' Debts. Dan's drunk driving. Egg sandwiches, 'fur stuck to my tongue,' a good boyfriend who enjoys 'that poem / you wrote about your ex.' An entire alphabet of the apparently ordinary made into lines that stand out like split geodes, from girlhood to quarter- or third-of-life crises, from 'jelly shoes and jelly sandwiches' all the way up—or down—to wars and whales, 'water welling gutters,' and years lost to health rollercoasters and generic Zoloft—here is a whole life that some of us recognize, portrayed in sonic palettes that never tire and rarely even repeat, and sparkle, and shine. If Laura Kasischke has an heir, she's here, making do, throwing dodgy parties, converting demons into tentative friends with melodic hexameters or deviled eggs. Here, too, are the family legacy of Argentine rulers' cruelty, the ordinary harm of patriarchy, lemons and oranges, love of one kind and love of another, and memory, memory, Argentina, New Jersey, basement floods, supermoons. Here we are, and by we I mean the poet and me and you, any of you. Join us there."
—Stephanie Burt, author of We Are Mermaids
—Ocean Vuong, author of On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous
"In the Good Years offers a stunning archaeological dig of language, time, and intimacy. Cresté's poems excavate tenderness and violence, the personal and the political, ecosystems and their destroyers, treasure and trash, history and the multiverse of futures contained therein. Each poem is a site of meticulous, gentle sifting, each line a careful curation of artifacts. Cresté's radical attention unearths and re-earths, restoring context to its discoveries and finding homes for the unhomed. Breathtaking."
—Tess Gunty, author of The Rabbit Hutch
"In In the Good Years, Laura Cresté forges a speaker attuned to historical and familial forces—a speaker ravenous for communion, a speaker who notices the distance between people, the gaps in history. Moving from childhood to adulthood, these poems radiate with a translucent interiority. I could feel the speaker's emotional and intellectual growth, setbacks. Each experience, each glimpse of the world is rendered in precise and resonant language. In the poems that hold the dead and disappeared in Argentina, Cresté deftly braids familial narratives, political violence, translation, guilt, and survival into a tour de force that jolts the senses. Laura Cresté is a remarkable poet. I'm thankful for her first book."
—Eduardo C. Corral, author of Guillotine
"'Airplanes from opposite windows in their twin beds.' 'Bright smear across spoiled film,' with 'no / choice left but to let the lit world in.' 'The sea out of the sea.' Debts. Dan's drunk driving. Egg sandwiches, 'fur stuck to my tongue,' a good boyfriend who enjoys 'that poem / you wrote about your ex.' An entire alphabet of the apparently ordinary made into lines that stand out like split geodes, from girlhood to quarter- or third-of-life crises, from 'jelly shoes and jelly sandwiches' all the way up—or down—to wars and whales, 'water welling gutters,' and years lost to health rollercoasters and generic Zoloft—here is a whole life that some of us recognize, portrayed in sonic palettes that never tire and rarely even repeat, and sparkle, and shine. If Laura Kasischke has an heir, she's here, making do, throwing dodgy parties, converting demons into tentative friends with melodic hexameters or deviled eggs. Here, too, are the family legacy of Argentine rulers' cruelty, the ordinary harm of patriarchy, lemons and oranges, love of one kind and love of another, and memory, memory, Argentina, New Jersey, basement floods, supermoons. Here we are, and by we I mean the poet and me and you, any of you. Join us there."
—Stephanie Burt, author of We Are Mermaids
Notă biografică
Laura Cresté is the author of You Should Feel Bad, winner of a 2019 Chapbook Fellowship from the Poetry Society of America. She holds an MFA from New York University and has received fellowships and other support from the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, the Sewanee Writers' Conference, the Tin House Summer Workshop, the Community of Writers, Monson Arts, and the St. Botolph Club Foundation. Her work has appeared in The American Poetry Review, Bennington Review, The Cortland Review, The Kenyon Review, Poetry Northwest, The Yale Review, and elsewhere. She lives in western Massachusetts.
Extras
Overripe
Sometimes it's like this: slugs
discover the basil no matter where it's planted.
Batshit on the welcome mat. I cave in
the burrow between cherry tomatoes
and rosemary. Every day the chipmunks
dig anew until I fill the hole with sticks,
menacing as the Blair Witch.
After storms, I skim the drowned and stunned
from the pool. Today's accounting:
one dead frog; newts: three dead, two living,
flung far from where the late tomatoes split
lewd as Jesus with his bloody heart.
Mike tends to never-ending tasks,
neatening the yard of fallen twigs,
while I believe in entropy and let it alone.
We drive to the farm with corn stacked on ice.
At the ignition turn, a chipmunk crawls
from the hood, and we confound each other
through the glass. A baby. Glimpsed
and then gone. I wish I remembered the look of it
as well as I do the frog—its terrible skin,
clear coating sliding off like jelly.
Bubble taut across its mouth.
When insurance stops covering my birth
control, I give it up and feel slightly more animal,
sore breasts, and more so when I trade plastic
for a shampoo bar and turn greasy from the coconut.
The radishes never take. Snakes undulate
in the pool and leave their skins behind
on the stone wall, flimsy dresses I'd shuck off
as I climbed drunk into bed for years.
The therapist in my phone asks
if the meditation he prescribed is helping.
Does it matter? I just need
the summer to end, for the garden
to die back a little.
Sometimes it's like this: slugs
discover the basil no matter where it's planted.
Batshit on the welcome mat. I cave in
the burrow between cherry tomatoes
and rosemary. Every day the chipmunks
dig anew until I fill the hole with sticks,
menacing as the Blair Witch.
After storms, I skim the drowned and stunned
from the pool. Today's accounting:
one dead frog; newts: three dead, two living,
flung far from where the late tomatoes split
lewd as Jesus with his bloody heart.
Mike tends to never-ending tasks,
neatening the yard of fallen twigs,
while I believe in entropy and let it alone.
We drive to the farm with corn stacked on ice.
At the ignition turn, a chipmunk crawls
from the hood, and we confound each other
through the glass. A baby. Glimpsed
and then gone. I wish I remembered the look of it
as well as I do the frog—its terrible skin,
clear coating sliding off like jelly.
Bubble taut across its mouth.
When insurance stops covering my birth
control, I give it up and feel slightly more animal,
sore breasts, and more so when I trade plastic
for a shampoo bar and turn greasy from the coconut.
The radishes never take. Snakes undulate
in the pool and leave their skins behind
on the stone wall, flimsy dresses I'd shuck off
as I climbed drunk into bed for years.
The therapist in my phone asks
if the meditation he prescribed is helping.
Does it matter? I just need
the summer to end, for the garden
to die back a little.