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Ofrendra by Norma Rios Sierra (Field Museum) |
Unlike you, I actually read books of contemporary poetry. Because they float my way and I like the cover. Or, in the case of “Citizen Illegal,” because a college-age neighbor loaned me José Olivarez’s 2018 debut collection. I take the literary recommendations of young people as a compliment, nearly a duty.
I enjoyed Olivarez’s casual, lowercase tone, his honesty, nodding along as he explains how his therapist, encouraging him to “make friends with your monsters,” doesn’t realize just how relentless those beasts can be.
...i ran & it never stoppedI forgave Olivarez the occasional broadside fired in my direction, such as in “Mexican Heaven,” which begins:
chasing me. each new humiliation
coming to life & following after me.
there are white people in heaven, too,Well, yeah, we white folks can be jerks.
they build condos across the street
& ask the Mexicans to speak English.
The poem ends:
i’m just kidding.Of course not. There can’t be, because white people don’t die. At least that’s the impression I took away last week from “Death: Life’s Greatest Mystery” at the Field Museum.
there are no white people in heaven.
The grim reaper gives us a tour of the globe. We see a Mexican ofrenda, eight paintings of a decomposing Japanese monk, a Ghanaian coffin decorated as a boat, a Haitian spirit flag, Peruvian mummies.
I particularly liked the mask of Tai Shan Wang, a denizen of Chinese hell, “Judge of the 7th Court, where liars and gossipers had their tongues removed.”
“Mmm, nice,” I thought. “We could sure use ...” Better stop there.
Animals were not overlooked. A deep-sea octopus seems very angry to find himself in a jar of preservative. One display explores grief in the animal world.
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