Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
In her latest collection, Sikelianos (The Loving Detail of the Living & the Dead) employs her joy-demanding title as more than a refrain, cleverly letting it unfold as a humanist battle cry amid the earth's downfall. It is this search for happiness that unites the disparate topics in the book's three sections. Sikelianos begins by writing about ordinary things: family history, meetings with a hand therapist, a daughter. Lines such as "cookies will make you happy" resound. This is joy as obsession in everyday ways. In the latter two sections, joy-as-conquest expands to animals and ecosystems. The poet's philosophical and analytical musings merge as she delineates, in elegant staccato lines, dozens of animals that have gone extinct, largely by humans' hands. "The last cow was killed for its excellent meat/ Had they been mistaken for sirens would the flesh have been/ so sweet," she writes of Steller's sea cow, a mammal gone extinct by 1768. To conclude, Sikelianos takes inspiration from Biosphere 2, a closed ecological system or, in other words, a science experiment that ostensibly rebuilds the world. "When did my ambidextrous happiness impinge on amphibians and spell apocalypse," Sikelianos asks; a big question for herself, for her poetry (so indebted to nature), and for all creatures still seeking happiness. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
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Review by Library Journal Review
Complete with endpapers, photos, diagrams, and illustrations; colored chapter separators; multicolor typography; passages in French and Greek; multiple-choice questions; and more, this brief volume from Sikélianòs (The Loving Detail of the Living and the Dead) is something of an event. In addition to being a thoughtful and engaging read, the work also includes plenty of visual white space for the poet's lingual balancing acts, which deconstruct form and flow, sometimes scattering words or letters across the page and other times condensing them into tight bunches. Sikélianòs provides structure by dividing her work into five sections: "Make Yourself Happy," "How To Assemble the Animal Globe," "Oracle or, Utopia [sic]," "Is There a River (Epode)," and "There Were Ancient Questions Inside My Head (Rider)." The poems themselves are often mysteries, providing only the outline of a thought, a reading experience akin to peering through a steamy window; other times, they sing and dance in the sunshine. Yet there is always a moment of surprise: "shirred/ aggregates/ mineral iridium/ irresidue/ smacked us Come/ smacked us Come/ the reactor/ Nuclear/ Heart atom/ o come." VERDICT Ambitious, powerful, and well produced; for all sophisticated poetry readers.-Iris S. Rosenberg, New York © Copyright 2017. 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.