What small sound Poems

Francesca Bell, 1967-

Book - 2023

"Francesca Bell's second collection of poems, What Small Sound, interrogates what it means to be a mother in a country where there are five times as many guns as children; female in a country where a woman is raped every two minutes; and citizen of a world teeming with iniquities and peril. In poems rich in metaphor and music and unflinching in their gaze, Bell offers us an exacting view of the audiologist's booth and the locked ward as she grapples with the gradual loss of her own hearing and the mental illness spreading its dark wings over her family. This is a book of plentiful sorrows but also of small and sturdy comforts, a book that chronicles the private, lonely life of the body as well as its tender generosities. What... Small Sound wrestles with some of the broadest, most complicated issues of our time and also with the most fundamental issue of all: love. How it shelters and anchors us. How it breaks us and, ultimately, how it pieces us back together"--

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2nd Floor 811.6/Bell Due Jan 20, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
Pasadena, CA : Red Hen Press [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Francesca Bell, 1967- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
102 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781636280790
9781636281018
  • Jubilations
  • Learning to Love the World That Is
  • Two Stories
  • Making You Noise
  • Domestic Failings
  • Empty
  • Maybe Stillness Saves Us After All
  • Late Blooming
  • Instrument Left in Its Case
  • I Leave My Window Open Now to Hear Them
  • From the Beginning
  • Endometrial Biopsy
  • Going to the Sperm Bank
  • Right to Life
  • After
  • Proofs
  • Girlfriend of Las Vegas Gunman Says Her Fingerprints Would Likely Be on Ammo
  • Conduction
  • Burdens
  • Just Like All the Girls
  • Rape Kit Rape Kit
  • All We Know
  • Intention Tremor
  • Mistakes of One Kind
  • The Dentist Says It's from Some Earlier Damage
  • What Did I Know
  • Containment
  • Dusk, the Day I Drove My Child to the Partial Hospitalization Program
  • Menopause, Insomnia, News
  • Preferred Pronouns: We/Us/Ours
  • Sorrow Is Innate in the Human
  • What Small Sound
  • Like a Friend
  • Love Is a Song You Listen to Later
  • Swimming the Flambeau
  • Why I Don't Drink
  • Rhubarb
  • Sometimes My Face Flushes When I Make Love
  • How Like a God
  • Admissions
  • The Way Some People Laugh at Funerals
  • One Day, My Body
  • Lightning Coming Closer All the Time
  • Breaking Eggs
  • My Daughter Was Always the Resourceful One
  • Lessons
  • Where We Are Most Tender
  • Taking Your Place
  • Late Mammogram
  • Scorpions
  • The Sound When the Held Note Ceases
  • Becoming
  • Tutor
  • Hush
  • Love in the Time of Covid-19
  • Turning a Corner
  • How Destruction Comes to Look Like Possibility
  • After the Hearing Test
  • Deciduous
  • Perimenopause
  • Manifest Image
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Bell's second collection of poems offers a portrait of motherhood, devastation, and hope. The author-'s first collection of poems, Bright Stain (2019),was a finalist for the Washington State Book Award and the Julia Suk Award. Her newest book is a testament to her finely tuned poetic talent as she turns to grapple with far-reaching societal issues, including mental illness, gun violence, and sexual assault. More than anything, these works explore "the necessary work of opening" one's self up to the world. The collection is split into four parts that weave together large-scale issues, such as domestic and societal violence against women, and individual challenges in the author's exploration of deafness. The titular poem describes Bell in an audiologist's booth attempting to wrestle with "the stillness out there strong / enough to suck me in." Similar stillness is captured and preserved in poems that consider questions about protecting children from a cruel world and how one prepares loved ones, and oneself, to face life's trials and unfair rules. Bell makes use of a wide variety of poetic structures to augment this analysis, which will keep readers on their toes. Her mastery of language yields such affecting lines as "your illness rummaged / inside you, digging, clawing, / sniffing for the sweetest parts." Perhaps Bell's greatest feat is her study of what is possible for a body in distress--how it can receive joy, what it can endure, and how far it can carry itself for love. Although the book is full of gut-wrenching loss, it makes room for indispensable moments of humor and hope. It offers poignant lessons on how to maintain strength amid sorrow and how one can find strength in quiet moments: "I want to feel what's next / curled inside me." A moving and musical set of poetic works. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.