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Occupied: Vienna is a Broken Man & Daughter of Hunger Paperback – August 3, 2020
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In Kika Dorsey's newest book of poetry, Occupied: Vienna is a Broken Man and Daughter of Hunger, the reader encounters a landscape ravaged by war and joins a cast of survivors.
"Paint me, Mother," Dorsey writes, "find me in the basement rummaging through everything I thought/I'd never find--" speaks to how the poet first conceived this project. While inspired by the stories of her own Austrian ancestry, Dorsey broke from her generally more autobiographical tradition seen in past works (Beside Herself, Coming Up for Air, and Rust) by taking a more erudite approach. Flexing her academic muscles Dorsey dives into her research to then deliver an ensemble of characters she crafted from history and her imagination. These girls and women diversify the experience as their stories parallel the stories of Dorsey's matriarchs as they all rise up to fend for themselves during the war and after. While some of these women have fallen from aristocracy, some of them were always poor; there are Jewish women who did and did not survive and there are women who carry the seed of their rapists.
Occupied almost reads like a novel as the vignettes present the opportunity for us to vicariously experience the lives portrayed upon these pages. We bear witness as these characters barter with the soldiers who occupy the land; as they forage the woods for mushrooms and berries to combat hunger; as they disguise their gender on more than one occasion to avoid sexual assault. These poems speak to the evils of war, focusing specifically on those realities women and children face, and these poems beg, "Never again!"
If you're a fan of Maggie Smith's glittering details, you'll love Dorsey's descriptions too: there are "eyes big and black as an eclipsed moon," "silhouettes like shadows," and "Monkshood is why witches traverse the sky on brooms." But there is also always her extraordinary use of color, whether it's "rivers of veins blue-green like the Danube" or the red of "raspberries sprinkled with sugar." If you appreciate storytelling poets such as Ai or Marsha De La O, Occupied must be next on your To Read List.
As brutal as the topic is, herbs sprout forth from the rubble, and as our healer, Dorsey turns them into medicine; furthermore, the "hope for spring" repeats throughout as Dorsey reminds us the darkest hour is just before the dawn, and she teaches us how to resurrect from ruin.
--Sarah Elizabeth Schantz, author of the novel Fig
- Print length100 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPinyon Publishing
- Publication dateAugust 3, 2020
- Dimensions6 x 0.24 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101936671689
- ISBN-13978-1936671687
Editorial Reviews
Review
"In Occupied, Kika Dorsey wades in the troubled waters of two times on two continents, but the stories are linked through desperation, survival, blood. With her gift of precise detail--monkshood, Klimt's gold, cognac and marbles--and her storytelling prowess, Dorsey's poems offer us the bite of the cold and the shadows of the world, and remind us of the need to be sharp, to keep our eyes wide open. These are poems to break your heart, and also an homage to how, despite great sorrow, injustice, and fear, we find a way forward."--Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, author of Hush, Naked for Tea and Even Now
***
"Kika Dorsey`s essential collection of superbly composed poems deals with WWII, the postwar years in Austria, once home of her parents, and traumatic experiences, mainly those of her mother then a very young child. The stark poems show an amazing suction which draws you immediately in crucial stories till our present, visceral descriptions, which remind me vividly of my own postwar experiences in Germany, vigorous in diction with an elemental power. Voices of her mother and other persons tell stories, memories, illuminating years of violence, hardship, and extreme hunger. 'My hollow belly' taught a child how to survive by gathering wild foods which might be the wrong one like poisonous mushrooms. 'I caught my daughter / chewing the leg of my lederhosen, ' says grandmother in one of the poems. (How could we laugh at Charlie Chaplin`s scene when eating leather shoe-laces like spaghettis).
"Traumatic experiences in childhood are inscribed in a fast epigenetic process with effects on future generations. 'Roots survive, ' says the author thinking not only of her parent's shattered childhood, shattered as the body of her father on cobblestones and shattered as her mother's mind when she developed Alzheimer: 'My mind is a handful of crumbs.'
"Kika Dorsey wanted to know more about her parents, about collective human failings in WWII, hunger, plight and the effects on human souls when having gone through years of extreme psychic stress. Her researches back to the roots, a net overriding which shows us how deeply interwoven we all are, everywhere in this world, have lead her to a better, deeply empathetic understanding, a way to oneself as well and a chance of transformation which 'leads to hope and care for a fragile future.'"--Ute von Funcke, author of four poetry collections in German, and author of two poetry collections, translated into the English by Stuart Friebert, Between Question & Answer and Shadow of Shadows.
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Product details
- Publisher : Pinyon Publishing (August 3, 2020)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 100 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1936671689
- ISBN-13 : 978-1936671687
- Item Weight : 5.6 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.24 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #4,447,109 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #14,003 in Poetry by Women
- #22,191 in American Poetry (Books)
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“Sometimes a voice lives on for many decades
after the body crawls out of the ruins,
after the war.”
The theme of remembrance runs through the collection: “I have forgotten myself already./ I have remembered too much already.” In vivid details, Dorsey excavates a painful past and honors it through her storytelling. Her stunning imagery hits the reader in the gut: “My stomach is full of knives”; “she had no wings, just a coat of tattered feathers”. At the same time, it gives the poems a heart-wrenching beauty; in all the sorrow, this is a world where an infant’s cries are “as open as the white blossoms I collect”. There is hope amid the rubble: “Out of every death sprouts an insistence/to live, despite the ashes.”
A moving, important, and beautiful book.