Elegies in Blue

By Benjamin Alire Sáenz
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    Saenz speaks from inside the skin of himself–Chicano, political being, spiritual seeker, family man and lover.

    Description

    Benjamin Saenz writes, “In the desert, we live in a desert of translation.” That is exactly what he sets out to do, in this, his third book of poems–translate experience into words. He writes of history and learning and death. He writes of loss and knowledge and the difficulties of coming to terms with the harsh and untamable landscape of the border. Ultimately, his elegies are “stones that praise the lives” of those who have given him words.

    In the tradition of Latin American literature, Saenz believes that poetry should be part of the public discourse and not shunted aside as irrelevant to our country’s larger issues. Here he maps out personal, political and spiritual histories. He speaks about political and literary heroes, anti-heroes and everyday people, and he remembers his growing up Chicano in the Catholic world of the U.S./Mexico Border. From these elements, he creates a philosophy of speaking publicly as poet.

    About the Creators

    Benjamin Alire Sáenz

    Benjamin Alire Sáenz is an award-winning novelist, poet, and writer of children's books. His many acclaimed titles include the picture books A Gift from Papá Diego, The Dog Who Loved Tortillas, and A Perfect Season for Dreaming; the young adult novels Sammy and Juliana in Hollywood and Last Night I Sang to the Monster; and the adult story collection Everything Begins and Ends at the Kentucky Club, all from Cinco Puntos Press. His Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe won the Printz Award, young adult literature's highest honor. Ben lives and works in El Paso, Texas. Visit his website at benjaminsaenz.com.

    Reviews

    • "To write well about your life, you need to have a life worth writing about. On that score, Saenz, a son of the Rio Grande border, hits pay dirt. At that border, poverty meets wealth more starkly than anywhere else except, perhaps, at Israel's fences between Jews and Palestinians. When a writer there speaks of himself, he can speak of his people and how the border defines them. That Saenz does in verse and prose poems distinguished by simple mellifluousness, clear imagery, and effortless balancing of the oracular and the personal voices.He writes of a boy asking important questions, loving the names in books, and figuring out why his father quit drinking (for love, though love makes nothing easy), and that boy is more imaginably him than the first-person speaker in other poems, an 'I' that includes every border native who knows why the subjects of the book's many elegies--figures ranging from Denise Levertov to Cesar Chavez to Maria de Guadalupe Cenizeros, 'citizen of Smeltertown'--are important to their identity."

      - Booklist
    • "ELEGIES IN BLUE is a remarkable selection of free-verse poetry that transcribes the author's life experience of learning, absorbing history, growing, experiencing joy, and suffering terrible loss. Creating poetry akin to elegies in that it praises the lives of those who helped the author find the right words, ELEGIES IN BLUE is a book of memorable, dynamic verse."

      - Midwest Book Review
    • "To date, Sáenz has split his literary career almost in half between prose and poetry. The latest addition to his corpus melds the two genres into two dozen poems largely composed in prose. Liberally expanding the application of the term elegy, Sáenz casts a tone of lament, sometimes subtly and sometimes overtly, over most of the subject matter--childhood, innocence, family, life, death. This mood culminates in the ubi sunt ('where are') motif in the poem 'At the Grave of the Twentieth Century,' which pays homage at the graves of the likes of Karl Marx, JFK, the poet's father-in-law, and his grandfather.Thematically perpetuating his preoccupation with politics and ardently defending the Mexican American border community of which he is an integral part, these poems are drenched in much firmer reality and overlaid with more indignation than his recent novel Carry Me Like Water. Recommended especially for public libraries serving Mexican American populations, who will relate to the themes of restlessness and alienation."

      - Library Journal
    • Two new books by former Las Cruceans offer moving and poetic views of life. Both books offer treats for those who love words . . . and writers who can skillfully put them to use to explore the mysteries and meanings of life's journeys.In "Elegies in blue: Poems" (by Benjamin Alire Sáenz, Cinco Puntos Press, paperback, $13.95), Las Cruces native Sáenz writes eloquently about everything from coming of age to life's profound passages and the psychic battle scars of war. Sáenz, who won the American Book Award for his first collection of poems "Calendar of Dust," is a former Catholic priest and is currently an English professor at UTEP.In the poems and essays of "Elegies," he roams through memories of Border life and major historical events like a kind of poetic archaeologist. "I wander the ground of this decaying earth. Like a historian, I am not another tourist. But what is a historian if not a tourist who gathers graves and facts and orders them," he asks in "The Rags of Times on Rio Vista Farm (or A Short History of Clothes).""At the Graves of the Twentieth Century" offers a series of ruminations at the graves of Karl Marx, John F. Kennedy, Pancho Villa, David Macias, and "Grandpo" Juan Lucero Sáenz, ending with dark ruminations at the grave of the century itself: ". . . they might have buried you, here, in El Paso/Juárez, dumping ground of the Americas. Not that you would have known any rest here. Peace is not in great abundance on the border."

      - Las Cruces Sun News

    Paperback

  • ISBN 9780938317647
  • Publication Date Feb 01, 2002
  • Trim Size 8.9 × 5.9 × 0.3 in
  • Weight 0.6875 lbs
  • Page Count 144
  • Interests

  • Audience Adult
  • BISAC Category 1 POETRY / American / General
  • BISAC Category 2 LITERARY CRITICISM / American / Hispanic & Latino
  • BISAC Category 3 SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / American / Hispanic American Studies
  • Themes Coping with Death, History & Civics, Integrity / Honesty, Latinx / Latino / Hispanic, Nonfiction, Poetry
  • Reading Levels

  • Guided Reading Adult
  • Interest Level Adult
  • Reading Level Adult
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