<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><p><strong><em>Lexicon</em> is a worthy successor to Allison Joseph's award-winning breakthrough, <em>Confessions of a Barefaced Woman</em>. Joseph loves language, though as a black woman, it doesn't always love her back. Still, she persists--with language as friend and foe.</strong></p><p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><em>Lexicon</em> is a worthy successor to Allison Joseph's award-winning breakthrough, <em>Confessions of a Barefaced Woman</em>. This time around, this self-professed "barefaced woman" is setting her sighs/sights on language and what it does for and with and to her. Joseph loves language, making it her slippery passion in poems about childhood griefs and fashion faux pas, movie musicals and empty airports, "rules" for writing and rules for reading. Though Joseph loves language, it doesn't always love her back--but in her wise, readable, and imaginative way, she persists while documenting the minefields of racism and sexism. Joseph finds joy in the most unlikely of places, and in <em>Lexicon</em>, her adoration for the written word lets us see those places in sharp and evocative relief. All hail this bounty, this <em>Lexicon</em>!</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p><em>Lexicon</em> is an investigation of form rendered in a uniquely sensual, sensory exploration of language whose depth and breadth encompass a multitude of poetic, lyric, and linguistic traditions that reflect the dialects, cultures, and communities in which Allison Joseph is fluent. The iambic beat of the English language is at the heart of her verse whose fluidity and sonic play deliver a cornucopia of lines grounded in a meditation on embodiment, class, race, gender, sexuality, time, and place. Food metaphors abound in a sexy, sense-laden feast of images served with an exuberant yet intellectually meticulous command of forms such as villanelles and sestinas whose recursiveness mirrors the poet's relationship with time and memory. In Joseph's capable hands, the oft-maligned and often dusty ars poetica sings with a fresh music and emotional candor that marries formal and narrative lyrical poetry. In this remarkable collection, the poet is at the height of her powers.<br><strong>--Wendy Chin-Tanner, author of <em>Anyone Will Tell You</em></strong></p><br><p>Allison Joseph's <em>Lexicon</em> is poetic celebration, elegy, and most of all, song. Exploiting tensions between content and form, body and body image, women and misogyny, race and stereotype, these are poems that thrum and churn within their own well-wrought urns--"bodies pushing words beyond the real"--frequently calling out the histories and hypocrisies of their own formal embodiments. The poems in <em>Lexicon</em> hum, croon, and belt out their refrains with heartbreaking candor, shimmer, and sashay--revealing a poet so deft with form that she can easily code-shift between violence and ecstasy, side-eye and wit, lyric torch song and funk. Allison Joseph is a poet whose skilled craft and remarkable voice combine to make a remarkable music, and this book is both powerhouse and pleasure.<br><strong>--Lee Ann Roripaugh, author of <em>tsunami vs. the fukushima 50</em></strong></p> <p/><li>Featured on LA Times Festival of Books Poetry Stage</li><br><li>Featured in Mercurius Magazine</li><br><li>Reviewed in On The Seawall by <em>Ron Slate </em></li><p></p><ul><li>Featured in Little Infinite</li></ul><p></p><br>
Cheapest price in the interval: 16.49 on October 22, 2021
Most expensive price in the interval: 16.49 on November 8, 2021
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