<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>"The poems in sulphurtongue dwell in the entanglement of trauma and desire with more-than-human ecosystems. An unruly, femme, Latinx body confronts the boundaries of what qualifies as un/natural. Oracles appear in public transit. Revenants and polyamorists alike pass on unusual inheritances. Meanwhile, social identities of queerness, gender, race, and illness all emerge as inherently biological, ecological, and irreducibly fluid relations. Ending in the mine-scarred landscapes of northern Ontario, these poems want to imagine acts of care and desire that can flourish in a toxic environment."--<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>An urgent, powerful examination of place and the ways in which all kinds of identities exist and collide.</b> <p/>GOVERNOR GENERAL'S LITERARY AWARD FOR POETRY, FINALIST <p/> <p/>The poems in <i>sulphurtongue</i> ask how to redefine desire and kinship across languages, and across polluted environments. An immigrant family scatters over a stolen continent. Oracles appear in public transit, and online. Bodies are transformed by nearby nickel mines. Doppelgangers, Catholic saints, and polyamorists alike pass on unusual inheritances. Deeply entangled in relations both emotional and ecological, this collection confronts the stories we tell about gender, queerness, race, religion, illness, and trauma, seeking new forms of care for a changing world.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><b>Praise for <i>sulphurtongue</i> and Rebecca Salazar: <p/></b> <br> "'Childless Offspring, ' a poem that appears early in the collection, captures the essence of <i>sulphurtongue</i> 'one foot slipping on banana peels / and one foot firmly in the grave.' Salazar's writing is slippery in its play and firm in its execution of language. Salazar is referential, reverential, irreverent in their engagement with the violence this world puts upon so many of us, that this world has put on them. It's in the noticing of Salazar's noticing that I notice the way secrets move these poems, and how these poems move through secrets. The imagery and language of landscapes enhances this quality: 'cryptoecology' 'acid rain' busses, planets, skin conditions--there is mystery to the cause and effect of the everyday considerations these poems hold. In <i>sulphurtongue, </i> secrets are embodied within ecosystems big and small." --Trynne Delany, <i>The Puritan</i> <p/>Rebecca Salazar's poetry is a life-preserver in a sea of prejudice, pain, and confusion. Her words sing us back to what's essential: truth, often cutting but always necessary, and beauty, found in the least likely of places. --Alicia Elliott, author of <i>A Mind Spread Out on the Ground<br></i><br>The sprawling visionary heft of<i> sulphurtongue </i>recoils the diluted senses of earth and skin, sex and sulphur dioxide, queerness and religion, and more to reveal their deeper labyrinths of meaning. The singular power of this work rests not only in its wholly mature command of the craft, but in how Salazar's <i>sulphurtongue</i> is a burning votive towards a world where the warped silos of history's personal, ecologic, and collective toll gather toward a new imagining. A shimmering, head-long, heart-spin of a debut. --Canisia Lubrin, author of <i>The Dyzgraphxst <p/></i> <p/><b><br></b><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>REBECCA SALAZAR (she/they) is a writer, editor, and community organizer currently living on the unceded territory of the Wolastoqiyik people. The author of poetry chapbooks <i>the knife you need to justify the wound </i>(Rahila's Ghost) and <i>Guzzle</i> (Anstruther), Salazar also edits for <i>The Fiddlehead </i>and <i>Plenitude</i> magazines.
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