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The Keepsake Storm (Camino del Sol)
 
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The Keepsake Storm (Camino del Sol) [Paperback]

Gina Franco (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Camino del Sol February 1, 2004
Here is Kathryn, "nearly 88, infinity next to infinity, / but infinity curled on itself, a whirlwind / that whipped about the house and was gone, / rain in its wake, a smell of dirt." Kathryn is near the end of her life and is losing her memories: travels, husbands, a storm of keepsakes. As Gina Franco unleashes that storm and as Kathryn's flood of memories washes over us, we know at once that we are in the hands of a truly gifted poet. "The Keepsake Storm" is the culmination of a verse cycle that probes the depths of the heart—a meditation on the meaning of life in a difficult world. Drawing on a rich tradition of storytelling in Latino literature, Franco explores the transformative power of compassion as she addresses themes of cultural alienation, lost family roots, and the uncertain resiliency of the self. In writing that blends rapture, vision, and mystery, Franco calls on a multiplicity of voices and a prodigious command of forms to explore the underlying rhythms of life, finding poetry even in the imperfect transmissions of e-mail:
"I was happy to get your letter. I had a rough day.
My step-mom had a breakdown and is in a hospitol.
I don't understand all the why's of it. She has paranoia
scetsafrinia. (and I know that is spelled totally
wrong). I don't blame myself I just didn't see it coming."


By reaffirming the power of self-awareness, history, and place, Franco reaches out to all who struggle to find meaning in times of trouble or self-doubt. The Keepsake Storm is a personal journey through many lives that is nothing less than a celebration—and a reassessment—of American consciousness.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Gina Franco writes with the voice of experience, eloquently presenting snapshots of memory and reminiscence”—British Bulletin of Publications No. III “Finely wrought, so nuanced and complicated . . . heralds an exciting new presence on the poetic stage.”—Georgia Review

From the Back Cover

Drawing on a rich tradition of storytelling in Latino literature, Gina Franco explores the transformative power of compassion as she addresses themes of cultural alienation, lost family roots, and the uncertain resiliency of the self. By reaffirming the power of self-awareness, history, and place, she reaches out to all who struggle to find meaning in times of trouble or self-doubt. "A masterful new voice that deserves the widest possible readership." --Demetria Martínez "These poems sail above the whole bursting complex panoply of life, seeing and cherishing the chance to see. They bequeath a sense of place so deep it transcends particularity and arrives at the interior terrain of thought, the inscape of what-is. Gina Franco does the impossible thing that lyric poets set out to do: she retrieves the storm of being in its unsettling breadth, the world's devouring, the thou-art-that of transformation: hunger, love, death." --Alice Fulton "Let there be trembling over the waters of American poetry: The Keepsake Storm and Gina Franco have arrived, with keen intelligence, with adamantine beauty, and with gale force." --Frank X. Gaspar "Gina Franco has created a poetry storm that blows other poets out to sea: her first book is nothing short of stunning." --Luis Alberto Urrea "It is not enough for poets just to survive storms. Gina Franco interprets storms, unscrambles chaos, and honors wounds. Here is a poet to trust because of her sheer will to thrive, no matter what." --Rane Arroyo "Poems that singe the heart, even as they sing themselves into memory." --Maurya Simon

Product Details

  • Paperback: 104 pages
  • Publisher: University of Arizona Press; First Edition edition (February 1, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0816523290
  • ISBN-13: 978-0816523290
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.1 x 0.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,266,175 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Draws upon an impressive tradition of storytelling, February 3, 2005
This review is from: The Keepsake Storm (Camino del Sol) (Paperback)
Strongly recommended reading from first page to last, The Keepsake Storm showcases the lyrical talents of academician and poet Gina Franco who draws upon an impressive tradition of storytelling in Latino literature to explore the transformative power of compassion. Dealing with such diverse themes as cultural alienation, lost family roots, the ambiguous nature of the self, Gina Franco uses her poetry to reaffirm the power of self-awareness, history, and places. Everything Goes Down a Changeling: A great cloud of tiny insects--ingenious,/the summer light sifted through all those wings/like that, like a thought shifting/over a bog veined in bright water./The air was coming down/with an imminent rain--I could feel it./And you were there, shaking your head,/smiling at the camera though I felt slighted./Everything goes down a changeling, you said./You've got to have it how you can./So it was hopeless already when I noticed/that my legs were running/with blood, with mosquitos thickly drowning,/when you turned from me saying,/well, it's what you wanted.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars No Tortillas, No Roboso, No Sentimentality: The Water's Mean, June 21, 2004
This review is from: The Keepsake Storm (Camino del Sol) (Paperback)
To say Gina Franco's "The Keepsake Storm" marks an "auspicious debut" flouts the work's wizened eye and immaculate intonation, as well as the balance it creates between self-invention and its reverence for the ancient. This may be a new voice, but its wisdom is ancient and its compassion bottomless in its mastery. There is nothing more boldly American than this poet's celebratory public-letting of sangre mestiza unleashed, harnessed and rivened through the lenses of Romantic and Victorian poetic sensibilities, Chicano cultural narrative and regional legend as it inundates-washes clean-transfuses, annihilates as much as it resuscitates, our notions of poetic form and ethnicity.

Although many articles are written each year on the subject of the "death of American Poetry," hundreds of books of poems by American authors go into print each year that test readers abilities to understand what is meant by "a sequence of poems," as if the words "sequence" and "poem" were some strange abstraction. Like a river, the trajectory of "The Keepsake Storm" however is crystalline from its beginning. It is a mistake to read "precious" into the sequence's seductively deceptive title: first separate "keep"-meaning: to honor; to store; to prevent; to maintain--from the Old English "sake"-meaning: a fault; a contention; an offence-and you only begin to touch on the enormity of Franco's ruminations on ethnicity, gender, abuse, longing, as well as a hopefulness coupled with a fear that hopelessness, real hopelessness, exists.

These poems tell as much of time and place as they undo conventional notions of each: in one poem, the poetic figure who has read, and understands the image created by Mary Shelley "Frankenstein," conflates-or folds-over, as if looking through a transparency-it's childhood notion of Frankenstein's castle as it rises up out of a mining town in Arizona. A flood clears a path and lays bare root and future in a poem called "Del Rio," yet is sustained by a premonitory voice-"The Spirit that Comes When You Call"-that, in its invocation of self, articulates core and derivation older than time, older than Western History, that encompasses Christianity, Indigenous traditionalism, and Colonial mythology as God, La Llarona, and an inextricable force align as one. "You want real?" "Fishing," the first sonnet of the sequence shouts, and then it dares you to look "real" in the eye, dares the reader to go where "God is mean and fresh." And through to the last, the collection holds up its end of the bargain by offering reflected and refracted images of human frailty at times in its most glorious pathos and at others in its most indecorous humor.

Read this book! Get a new enhanced education. It is like no other of the many wonderful and exciting collections published by the University of Arizona Press under its Camino Del Sol imprint. In many ways in differentiates itself from the others in that there are no robosos, tortillas, no borders erected as symbols of obstinacy in the face of oppression or change. If they are there, they are there: simply part of the landscape of a people and a place. Franco has pushed opened a new political and cultural arena for latina letters as her work seems to ask the questions, What do we do with the languages and images that we learn away from home; How are we to talk about ourselves once we've read the Shelleys? Onces we know more of the world than when we left, what do we do to tell those we now live with about where we have come from? This work brings fresh understanding to the notion of "mezclar," Without apology or sentiment, Franco has boldly and intelligently stated with grace and wisdom of formalist training, "I am Latina and this too is what it can sound like!"
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