Synopses & Reviews
In this exuberant and distinctive collection, Dionisio Martínez addresses topics as diverse as love, the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre, twentieth-century art and music, and the relevance of language in an age of image. Much of Martínez's private iconography comes from the picket-fence California community of his youth, in which large events--from the veneration of pop icons (Jean Harlow, Ed Sullivan) to the Vietnam War--seemed to move in slow motion. As an adult, the poet tries to make sense of what the child could not grasp.
Review
"The voice is contemporary, level-headed, confiding, but it quite often deals in marvels and apocalypse . . . with that sort of verve diligent souls seem able to spark off from the infinite resources of language. . . . The best new American poet I've read in some time." William Scammell
Review
"Americans do not have the refracting lens through which to see themselves, but Martínez has uncovered their basic optimism, their heartfelt skepticism. He is blessed, and cursed, with senses of both intimacy and distance. The movement of his poetry is almost compulsive, worrying at the edge of association as it strives for explanation, melding concepts that might otherwise remain discrete. This is not surrealism, but a third landscape, an emotional territory carved out of the imagination." The Independent (UK)
Review
"Mr. Martínez has made the necessary accommodations with political reality, yet, for him, the dreadful fact of alienation continues to inform all other truth: 'No matter where I go,' he observes, 'I carry foreign currency.'" Judith Kitchen Georgia Review
Review
"[ is] pulled together by lines that zoom across the page, phrasing that grabs you almost more quickly than you can read it, and references so sly they're worth a second--and sometimes a third and a fourth--glance. Martínez delicately balances exuberance and poignancy, and many of his prose poems should be cautionarily prefaced, 'Please fasten your seat belt.'" William Ferguson New York Times Book Review
Review
"Always inventive, Martínez is the master of the memorable line: 'In a history of closed doors, an open / window means everything.' Recommended for all larger collections." Elizabeth Gunderson Booklist
Review
"[] sweeps the reader along on a wave of dazzling imagery and verbal magic. . . . This is an original voice, a fusion of American energy and Latin American mysticism, Whitman filtered through Márquez and Paz." Daniel L. Guillory Library Journal
Review
"Martínez's poems reflect poignantly on the poet's status as a Cuban exile destined to a perennial sense of dislocation." Peter Meinke Organica Quarterly
Synopsis
"Dionisio Martínez is one of the most exciting new voices in American poetry. His poems are mysterious and intellectually provocative. . . . They are the poems of a survivor."--Stephen Dunn
About the Author
Dionisio D. Martínez is the author of Bad Alchemy and a recipient of a Guggenheim fellowship. He lives in Tampa, Florida.