Carolyn Forché’s The Country Between Us bears witness to what she
saw in El Salvador in the late 1970s, when she travelled around a
country erupting into civil war. Documenting killings and other brutal
human rights abuses, while working alongside Archbishop Oscar
Romero’s church group, she found in her poetry the only possible way
to come to terms with what she was experiencing first-hand. By 1980,
when the fighting was becoming too dangerous, Archbishop Romero urged
Forché to return home, asking her to ‘talk to the American people,
tell them what is happening to us. Convince them to stop the military
aid.' A week later he was assassinated (and is only now being made a
saint). Back in the US, Forché gave readings and talks about
US-backed oppression in Central America, but found publishers and
critics uncomfortable with the startlingly different poems of her
second collection, poems relating to torture, murder, injustice and
trauma. When the book appeared in 1981, at a time when the conflict in
El Salvador had finally forced its way into public awareness, it won
her immediate recognition. Briefly available in Britain from Jonathan
Cape in the 1980s, it is now reissued by Bloodaxe to coincide with the
publication by Penguin Press in the US of Carolyn Forché’s long
awaited memoir of those times, What You Have Heard Is True: a memoir
of witness and resistance (with the UK edition from Penguin due
later), to be followed by a new collection in 2020, In the Lateness of
the World. The Country Between Us has sold tens of thousands of copies
on the US, where it has never been out of print. It won the Poetry
Society of America's Alice Fay di Castagnola Award, and was the Lamont
Poetry Selection of the Academy of American Poets.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781780373751
Publisert
2019
Utgiver
Bloodaxe Books
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter