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Year of the Dog

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In the tradition of women as the unsung keepers of history, Deborah Paredez's second poetry collection tells her story as a Latina daughter of the Vietnam War.

The title refers to the year 1970—the "year of the Metal Dog" in the lunar calendar—which was the year of the author's birth, the year of her father's deployment to Vietnam with a troop of Mexican-American immigrant soldiers, and a year of tremendous upheaval across the United States. Images from iconic photographs and her father's snapshots are incorporated, fragmented, scrutinized, and reconstructed throughout the collection as Paredez recalls untold stories from a war that changed her family and the nation.

In poems and lamentations that evoke Hecuba, the mythic figure so consumed by grief over the atrocities of war that she was transformed into a howling dog, and La Llorona, the weeping woman in Mexican folklore who haunts the riverbanks in mourning and threatens to disturb the complicity of those living in the present, Paredez recontextualizes the historical moments of the Vietnam era, from the arrest of Angela Davis to the haunting image of Mary Ann Vecchio at the Kent State Massacre, never forgetting the outcry and outrage that women's voices have carried across time.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from April 20, 2020
      The powerful second book from Paredez (This Side of Skin) invokes a wide range of literary forms and artistic mediums, including rhymed verse, prose poetry, photographs, and archival material, unified by an ongoing concern with the past and its quiet presence in the cultural landscape. As Paredez writes, “Trudell signals his location over the radio: Even the rocks which seem to lie dumb as they swelter in the sun thrill with memories of past events connected with the fate of my people.” These poems suggest that a shared repertoire of symbols, myths, and stories proves essential for fostering a sense of community. Yet, at the same time, this vocabulary must be expanded, revised, and modernized in order to be of service. For Paredez, the individual experience is rich with family narratives and shared memories, as well as the larger movements of culture: “When I enter/ this world,” she warns, “I’ll enter as Hecuba... purpled/ and yelping griefbeast,/ my mother’s spangled handiwork.” In addition to offering expertly crafted voices, Paredez has a gift for storytelling through form. This is an astonishing book.

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  • English

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