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English as a Second Language and Other Poems

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Warm tenderness and fiery critique sit side-by-side in Bolina's English as A Second Language, a collection that skewers, laments, and celebrates America with intelligence, humility, and a disarming sense of humor.

In Jaswinder Bolina's English as A Second Language and Other Poems, we are asked to imagine the tender and harsh realities of this world within a single breath— a Steiff monkey resting next to a child in a crib and the tired hands of "a thousand /women in Sidi Bouzid" assembling the stuffed animal. Coated in an armor of wit and humor and steeped in the idiosyncrasies of language, English as a Second Language pits sentimentality against cynicism and the personal against the national. What remains is the kaleidoscopic image of the modern American condition.

From elegy to persona, wide-ranging poems tell the story of a child of immigrants becoming a parent against the tumultuous backdrop of our politics and culture. Where the collection asks, "What chance do any of us have?," the poet finds hope, possibility. Bolina's musical poems zip across time, challenging the fixity of the book. Clues offer the possibility of an alternate reading, where backwards, a new emotional arc appears—dreamlike, the nostalgic origin story of a sleep-deprived parent tracing a path through language and history. Forwards, backwards, English as a Second Language skewers, laments, and celebrates America with intelligence and humility.

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    • Booklist

      September 15, 2023
      In his fourth book of poetry, Bolina (The 44th of July, 2019) continues to walk ""a thread of language like a tightrope across time and space,"" as Evie Shockley has remarked. Always delivered with an edge of irony and incomparable wordcraft, Bolina's lyrics are by turns vividly imagistic (""starlings made an ecstatic / calligraphy against the gloam""), acoustically playful (""the umber end / of summer""), and infused with an acute scrutiny of historical and current events as the specter of American politics haunts the book. In ""Mar-a-Lago-a-Mar,"" history is ""rich with wisteria and dilettantes // drinking Sazeracs in hotel bars."" In another poem, a U.S. tourist awash in the overwhelming wonder of the Sistine Chapel skips half a century forward to remark upon the present, ""all this artistry ends in half a nation / mourning a holy mogul in a circus tent."" Another poem compares a toddler thrashing in a bath to a fascist in his ""adorable unrelenting."" Even when elegiac, Bolina channels gleeful irreverence with regard to Rush Limbaugh, ""so raucous and high am I in the conga line / at the luau on the night of your fantastic passing."" Satisfying in its own right, this title should also compel readers to check out the rest of this author's urgently relevant work.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 18, 2023
      “I’m trying to say something that feels like hearing/ your voice for the first time,” writes Bolina (The 44th of July) in this elegiac collection. “It isn’t working,” he declares, though the effort allows for strange and delightful observations about fatherhood, Chicago’s dive bars, and the persistence of joy, even as “Bad News hotwires the buzzer,/ invites itself up with its bouquet of wild/ aneurysms and drooping embolisms.” A majority of these poems are elegies, yet while Bolina mourns, he is distracted by the beauty of each moment and the fun of language. In one poem, he reflects on a first love that blooms at Super Dawg, an iconic Chicago hot dog joint: “Endorphin, milkshake, endorphin,/ cheese fry.” In another, a nightmare becomes a trotting night mare, “her clackety wagon filled with snakes/ and shame.” “Second City Autumnal” flips the traumatic, tragedy-filled immigrant story into one that narrates the bustling normalcy of prepping food for a family visit, an act steeped in feelings of comfort: “And now who will tell her the city belongs to anyone else?/ And now who will say go back where you came from?” Bolina has gathered the mundane moments that make up a life and turned them into sparkling gems.

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