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Lucia Perillo's poetry embodies a sensibility at once personal and national. Many of her poems are candid and affecting - some document how she negotiates life with multiple sclerosis; others concern her working-class Catholic childhood in a small Hudson River town.
But in general, and even in these personal works, her poetry picks up the fragments of American cultureBart Simpson, crimes of violence, Girl Scouting, teen rebellion, redneck survivalists - and assembles them into a highly readable and illuminating cultural commentary. One poem, "Foley," blends the subjects of movie sound effects and phone sex to make the point that in electronic America things are seldom as they seemor sound.
In "For I Have Taught the Japanese," an ESL instructor confesses, "I was such/an idiot I even tried to apologize more than once/for Nagasaki." In a third, Perillo thumbs through a survivalist magazine to see what it has to offer to her newborn nephew: "They're hawking a T-shirt: I entered the world/fat, mad, and bald, and I plan on leaving that way."
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The oldest map with the name America: new and selected poems
1999, Random House
in English
- 1st ed.
0375501606 9780375501609
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