Review by New York Times Review
Limón has a Brooklyn sensibility and a home in Kentucky, and the poems in her fourth collection are all about negotiating strange terrain: "When we moved out here together, I kept apologizing/for everything, like a poor orphan in the film about my shame." Her alien landscapes aren't all landscapes, either; they include intimate relationships, death watches and life after loss. Her speakers long either to transcend their circumstances or to feel, finally, at home in them. The words "I want" appear so often they start to sound like a refrain: "I want to try and be terrific." "I want to be the rough clothes/you can't sleep in." "I want to be the largest animal that ever existed." "I want to be/who I am, going where/I'm going." Limón favors casual speech that can be inexact or inefficient ("there's a twisty summer storm outside," "like in real bad landscape/paintings," "He wrote me in a text to tell me this") but also effortlessly lyrical. "Sometimes," she writes, "you have to look around/at the life you've made and sort of nod at it,/like someone moving their head up and down/to a tune they like." It's that "sort of" that makes the lines feel as spontaneous as the nodding and as serendipitous as the life.
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [December 27, 2015]
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Limón (Sharks in the Rivers) goes into deep introspection mode in a fourth collection in which her speakers struggle with loss and alienation. As her poems move across varied geographies (New York, Kentucky, California), Limón narrates experiences in bewildering landscapes that should otherwise feel familiar. Perhaps feelings of alienation result from intersections of identity; perhaps they are the cost of memory, a theme woven through each of the collection's four sections. Memory inhibits Limón's speakers' acclimation to change: "You're the muscle/ I cut from the bone and still the bone remembers." Alienated, she returns to places and memories that are not familiar. "Bellow" exemplifies a palpable grief over feelings of loss and lost-ness. In it, Limón's ungendered speaker, estranged from any surroundings, is rendered unable to communicate feelings of loss. Using a litany of dark imagery, Limón's speaker maps where language fails, ending the poem with the insinuation of an undefinable, haunting sound, as if the speaker is a wandering phantom. In "Home Fires," the poet wonders, "How could I have imagined this? Mortal me,/ brutal disaster born out of so much greed." Recurring instances of anxiety about mortality in Limón's poems complicate experiences so richly written and felt. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
In her newest volume of poems, Limón (Sharks in the Rivers) delves into the divided self-self separated by geography, by loss, by change, by circumstance. In "Torn," she says "something/ that loves itself so much it moves across/ the boundaries of death to touch itself/ once more, to praise both divided sides/ equally...." Limón's landscape is Brooklyn, California, and the horsey and blue-grassy hills of Kentucky, and her writing is intensely intimate and wild, softly sensual and bold. In the mostly lyric narratives, with an occasional prose poem included, loss and redemption are apparent, and love-whether tough love or easy love-is resilient. "How good it is to love/ live things, even when what they've done/ is terrible, how much we each want to be...turned loose/ into our own wide open without a single/ harness of sin to stop us." VERDICT Generous of heart, intricate and accessible, the poems in this book are wondrous and deeply moving.-Karla Huston, Appleton, WI © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.