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Water Guest: Wisconsin Poetry Series

Autor Caroline M. Mar
en Limba Engleză Paperback – apr 2025
Lake Tahoe: home of the Washoe Tribe, a shining blue jewel that crowns the Sierra Nevada, and a beloved American vacation destination made accessible by the transcontinental railroad built largely by Chinese laborers. This gorgeous location forms the site from which Caroline M. Mar’s stunning collection, Water Guest, seeks to reconcile issues of identity, ownership, and place. Mar’s attempts to locate herself geographically, genealogically, and etymologically echo throughout the poems. A direct ancestor was a railroad laborer; is that why her love for the land feels older than herself? Or is it the siren call of the deep, clear water?

Raising questions of inheritance, the conundrum of land ownership, and the violence of history, Mar gives voice to the lost writing of Chinese laborers and silent communion to those of us still here—immigrant and Indigenous, settler and resister. This engaging collection finds acceptance, if not resolution, through the questions themselves.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780299352646
ISBN-10: 0299352641
Pagini: 112
Ilustrații: 0 illus.
Dimensiuni: 178 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.2 kg
Editura: University of Wisconsin Press
Colecția University of Wisconsin Press
Seria Wisconsin Poetry Series


Notă biografică

Caroline M. Mar is the great-granddaughter of a railroad laborer and the author of Special Education and the chapbook Dream of the Lake. A high school health educator in her hometown of San Francisco, she is getting to know her new home of Oakland. A member of Rabble Collective, she has been granted residencies at Storyknife, Ragdale, and Hedgebrook, among others.

Extras

“On a fire day, 

children are not allowed outside without masks. 
Unmitigated curse might be the Earth’s secret name 
for humanity. The melting point of steel 
is twenty-five hundred degrees. Bone does not melt

but burns. What is the melting point of history?”

—Excerpt from “Fire Control”

Cuprins

遺 產

Failed Translations
Dream of the Lake
Mythology
Stage 1: Cold Shock / Threat No. 1 Loss of Breathing Control
Stage 1: Cold Shock / Threat No. 2 Heart and Blood Pressure Problems
Stage 1: Cold Shock / Threat No. 3 Mental Problems
With a surface area of 191.6 square miles and a depth of 1,645 feet, Lake Tahoe is the largest and the second-deepest alpine lake in the United States
Naming
Intelligible
Burials
Stage 2: Physical Incapacitation
Portraits of the Ancestor
1870 census; Truckee, CA: Ah John, male, 18; occupation: prostitute
Stage 3: Hypothermia
S---- Valley
Fire Control
Stage 4: Circum-rescue Collapse

Catalog of Writings Left by Chinese Railroad Laborers of the C.P.R.R.
水 客
高 祖 父 : A Correspondence : 太 爺

Tragedy
Mercy
長 衫
Guest: First Translation
Swim Team Outer Space
Song for Great-Grandfather
Tie
Guest: Second Translation
Property
John Chinaman
Celestials
Guest: Third Translation
Certainty
Being Away from the Lake
Distinctions
The Ghost Ship
Song for Great-Great-Grandfather
Lake of the Sky
 
Acknowledgments
Notes

Recenzii

“Mar speaks directly to her own great-grandfather, one such railway laborer, and themes of silence and attempts at reconciliation continue to wind fluidly throughout Water Guest.”

“Mar contends with the white-gloved history of the American West, forcing us to hold our breaths, to keep our eyes open, to face what has been hidden, to dive into the murkiness beneath our feet. She doesn’t hold her tongue in this searing collection. ‘What is the melting point of history?’ she dares. Incendiary—so hot—this book; it just might burn shit down.”

“In a probing search for lost connection, through powerful poems centered on Tahoe’s icy lake, Mar resists the erasure of her Chinese ancestors who labored there (not an ink stroke left in their own hand), inquiring into their silence in eloquent language of unstoppable invention, evocative lyricism, and historical correction.”

“Whether meditating on the natural world, interrogating the personal life, or excavating history, the waters in this collection are vast, ancient, and powerful. Mar writes with a fine lyrical precision and a stirring range of feeling to connect the world of the reader to the world of the poem. In each of these pages you’ll find something human, something of yourself, as the poems call out: ‘Here you are, reflected / in the water’s depths.’”