<p><em>Poetry Matters</em> Interview with Francesca Bell on her poetry book <em>Bright Stain.</em></p>

<p>Video by <em>Blank Verse Films</em> of Francesca Bell's poem "You Can Call Me Ma'am".</p>

<p>Excerpted in <em>Women's Voices for Change</em>.</p>

<p>Interview with Max Sessner on Body Literature.com</p>

<p>Conversation with Lisa Higgs in <em>The Adroit Journal</em></p>

<p>Translation in B O D Y Magazine</p> <p>Featured in Los Angeles Review of Books </p><p><br /></p>

<p>Featured in RATTLE Magazine</p>

<p>"Beware: Bright Stain is an addictive read, almost impossible to put down once started." <strong>—Scott Neuffer, <em>Shelf Awareness</em></strong></p><p><br /></p>

<p>"A penetrating collection of ruthless, unapologetic poetry." <strong>—Kirkus Reviews</strong></p><p><strong><br /></strong></p>

<p>"How deeply gratifying to see Francesca Bell’s electric, erotic and completely ravishing debut collection, <em>Bright Stain</em>, at last in the world. For the past ten years she has been writing some of the most charged, subtle and yet devastating poems in American poetry. Many of these dramatic vignettes are laced with a rare sexual candor and a whip-smart emotional intelligence. <em>Bright Stain</em> is one of the most darkly elegant and luminous books of recent years; it is, in all ways, truly a wonder." <strong>—David St. John</strong></p><p><strong><br /></strong></p>

<p>"Unflinching, tender, and sensual, the poems in Francesca Bell's, <em>Bright Stain</em> reach straight for the aorta and never let go. The poet asks nothing less than to face oneself honestly, yet with compassion." —<strong>Sherry Smith, <em>Rhino</em></strong></p><p><br /></p>

<p>"Francesca Bell’s poems are fierce and tender, passionate, compassionate, disturbing and delightful. Wide-ranging, finely-honed, smart and surprising, Bright Stain is a compelling debut collection!" <strong>—Ellen Bass</strong></p><p><strong><br /></strong></p>

<p>"Francesca Bell's first book of poetry...reflects a dark universe in which sexual pleasure and pain are intricately linked....This debut collection is impressive for its distinctive voice and pungent imagery." —<strong>Meryl Natchez, <em>Zyzzyva</em></strong></p><p><br /></p><p>"<i>Bright Stain</i> (Red Hen Press, 2019) is not a book for the faint of heart. In Bell’s debut work, the reader will need to brace herself not only in regard to subject matter, but also to Bell’s deft lines, images, and unexpected narratives." —<em><b>Poetry Matters</b></em></p><p><br /></p><p>"Your debut collection, Bright Stain, is a hard-hitting commentary on want and—like its title—is a dichotomy offering an oftentimes unsettling look at what is bright in our world and what is a stain." —Lisa Higgs, <em><b>The Adroit Journal</b></em></p><p><br /></p>

- Scott Neuffer,

Unapologetically sensual and forthright, Bell explores desire, loss, faith, doubt, tenderness, and violence; and sex as experience, metaphor, and magnifying lens for relationships.

Bright Stain may or may not become the Sex and the City of poetry, but this knock-your-socks-off debut will likely inspire debate—perhaps controversy―as it inhabits some startling points of view, including those of pedophile priests, serial killers, and prison inmates. Those who miss reading these breathtaking, visceral poems won’t know what their friends are raving about.

*FINALIST in Poetry for the Washington State Book Awards*

Les mer
Unapologetically sensual and forthright, Bright Stain explores desire, loss, faith, doubt, tenderness, and violence; and sex as experience, metaphor, and magnifying lens for relationships.

DEMOGRAPHIC— Feminists and readers of poetry.

ERROTICLY THEMED POETIC STYLE— These poems explore vulnerability in human bodies, love, sex, society, gender, race and class. Bright Stain manages to treat sex and violence, while being unapologetically sensual and serving as a metaphorical magnifying lens for sexual, romantic, marital and hapless relationships.

AWARDS— Rattle’s won the 2014 Neil Postman Award for Metaphor.

Les mer

Dreaming Helen Keller
Always the interminable spelling
on my inadequate palm.
One letter at a time, like a slow drip
off the eaves after a big rain,
and me, still parched, tipping my face
to the sky, wanting to holler.
If only I could learn to shape air
into something recognizable.
If only someone would whisper poems
along the insides of my arms,
a hymn sung by fingertips
across my belly, all the way
to the peak of each breast,
my body’s rafters reverberating.
Then, a suspenseful little story
unfolding up and down my thighs,
finally, a cacophony,
both lyrical and guttural:
let my little cave echo, trill, open
like a throat to answer. O, fill my body—
this clumsy, mute organ—with song.

Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781597098618
Publisert
2019-06-20
Utgiver
Red Hen Press
Vekt
136 gr
Høyde
228 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
8 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
104

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Francesca Bell’s poems and translations appear in many journals, including B O D Y, Massachusetts Review, New Ohio Review, North American Review, Poetry Northwest, Prairie Schooner, and Rattle. She is the former poetry editor of River Styx, the translator of a collection of poems by Palestinian poet Shatha Abu Hnaish (Dar Fadaat, 2017), and the author of the collection Bright Stain (Red Hen Press, 2019).