RIP is located in a world of loss.
Waddah Faris was Omar Sabbagh's maternal uncle. He was an artist, a nomad, a man who 'embossed' himself on those he knew, a person who '...when he walked into a room / God switched-on his camera' ('Charisma'). Above all, Waddah Faris was loved: 'People loved you because they knew you, and knew, too, / that kindness for you was inevitable, a lit fuse. / You lived your life like a full-bodied wish, careless with your care, ' ('Life With Style'). His loss is enormous and for the poet and his family that loss is deeply personal.
Those dying in Gaza are so many that the particularity of death is too easily subsumed in overwhelm. We can hardly fathom the enormity of the daily horror. The loss of a whole people leaves us aghast and '...when it comes to a starless catastrophe / like this, and all your tools go numb, ' ('Losing Vocab') we need to ask what kind of world we are living in, how we got here and how we lend our support to the suffering.
Moving between these two losses-each personal, each urgent, Omar Sabbagh asks us to care. He asks us to dare to look into the face of a child who, limbless, 'smiles at this father', who in the worst of worlds, continues to find joy, hope and love, 'This child of sheer perfect music, blow after blow after blow.' ('This Child Of Utter Song'). He asks that we see, '...people / just like me-with needs and desires, with projects / and hopes and fears-dying.' and ask ourselves, 'Who will protect / them? Because only that is real.' ('The Delusion')
Les informations fournies dans la section « Synopsis » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.
Dr. Omar Sabbagh is a widely published poet and critic. His work has appeared in, amongst others, Poetry Review, Poetry Wales, The London Magazine, Lighthouse, and Envoi. He has published several poetry collections with Cinnamon Press, including, But It Was an Important Failure and To the Middle of Love, as well as this debut fiction novella, Via Negativa ― a parable of exile. His next collection with Cinnamon will be Morning Lit: Portals After Alia will be published in Spring 2022. He has published critical essays on a number of writers, including George Eliot, Lawrence Durrell, and Henry Miller. Omar has a PhD in English Literature from King’s College London and is presently an Assistant Professor in English at the American University in Dubai.
Les informations fournies dans la section « A propos du livre » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.
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Paperback. Etat : New. RIP is located in a world of loss.Waddah Faris was Omar Sabbagh's maternal uncle. He was an artist, a nomad, a man who 'embossed' himself on those he knew, a person who '.when he walked into a room / God switched-on his camera' ('Charisma'). Above all, Waddah Faris was loved: 'People loved you because they knew you, and knew, too, / that kindness for you was inevitable, a lit fuse. / You lived your life like a full-bodied wish, careless with your care,' ('Life With Style'). His loss is enormous and for the poet and his family that loss is deeply personal.Those dying in Gaza are so many that the particularity of death is too easily subsumed in overwhelm. We can hardly fathom the enormity of the daily horror. The loss of a whole people leaves us aghast and '.when it comes to a starless catastrophe / like this, and all your tools go numb,' ('Losing Vocab') we need to ask what kind of world we are living in, how we got here and how we lend our support to the suffering.Moving between these two losses-each personal, each urgent, Omar Sabbagh asks us to care. He asks us to dare to look into the face of a child who, limbless, 'smiles at this father', who in the worst of worlds, continues to find joy, hope and love, 'This child of sheer perfect music, blow after blow after blow.' ('This Child Of Utter Song'). He asks that we see, '.people / just like me-with needs and desires, with projects / and hopes and fears-dying.' and ask ourselves, 'Who will protect / them? Because only that is real.' ('The Delusion'). N° de réf. du vendeur LU-9781788641661
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Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. RIP is located in a world of loss.Waddah Faris was Omar Sabbaghs maternal uncle. He was an artist, a nomad, a man who embossed himself on those he knew, a person who .when he walked into a room / God switched-on his camera (Charisma). Above all, Waddah Faris was loved: People loved you because they knew you, and knew, too, / that kindness for you was inevitable, a lit fuse. / You lived your life like a full-bodied wish, careless with your care, (Life With Style). His loss is enormous and for the poet and his family that loss is deeply personal.Those dying in Gaza are so many that the particularity of death is too easily subsumed in overwhelm. We can hardly fathom the enormity of the daily horror. The loss of a whole people leaves us aghast and .when it comes to a starless catastrophe / like this, and all your tools go numb, (Losing Vocab) we need to ask what kind of world we are living in, how we got here and how we lend our support to the suffering.Moving between these two losseseach personal, each urgent, Omar Sabbagh asks us to care. He asks us to dare to look into the face of a child who, limbless, smiles at this father, who in the worst of worlds, continues to find joy, hope and love, This child of sheer perfect music, blow after blow after blow. (This Child Of Utter Song). He asks that we see, .people / just like mewith needs and desires, with projects / and hopes and fearsdying. and ask ourselves, Who will protect / them? Because only that is real. (The Delusion) In the midst of international carnage and calamity, a beloved member of the family dies. How do we react? Where does the mourning for kith and kin end and mourning for greater humanity begin? This deeply personal and heartfelt poetry collection by the reknowned Lebanese poet, Omar Sabbagh, deep dives into the trauma of our days. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9781788641661
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Paperback. Etat : Brand New. poetry pamphlet edition. 42 pages. 8.27x5.83x0.10 inches. In Stock. This item is printed on demand. N° de réf. du vendeur __1788641663
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