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The Carrying

Poems

Ada Limón

$27.99

Paperback

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English
Milkweed Editions
20 July 2021
WINNER OF THE NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE AWARD

FINALIST FOR THE PEN/JEAN STEIN BOOK AWARD

From National Book Award finalist Ada Limón comes The Carrying—her most powerful collection yet.

Vulnerable, tender, acute, these are serious poems, brave poems, exploring with honesty the ambiguous moment between the rapture of youth and the grace of acceptance. A daughter tends to aging parents. A woman struggles with infertility—“What if, instead of carrying / a child, I am supposed to carry grief?”—and a body seized by pain and vertigo as well as ecstasy. A nation convulses: “Every song of this country / has an unsung third stanza, something brutal.” And still Limón shows us, as ever, the persistence of hunger, love, and joy, the dizzying fullness of our too-short lives. “Fine then, / I’ll take it,” she writes. “I’ll take it all.”

In Bright Dead Things, Limón showed us a heart “giant with power, heavy with blood”—“the huge beating genius machine / that thinks, no, it knows, / it’s going to come in first.” In her follow-up collection, that heart is on full display—even as The Carrying continues further and deeper into the bloodstream, following the hard-won truth of what it means to live in an imperfect world.

By:  
Imprint:   Milkweed Editions
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 215mm,  Width: 139mm, 
ISBN:   9781571315137
ISBN 10:   1571315136
Pages:   120
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Contents 1. A Name Ancestors How Most of the Dreams Go The Leash Almost Forty Trying On a Pink Moon The Raincoat The Vulture & the Body American Pharaoh Dandelion Insomnia Dream of the Raven The Visitor Late Summer after a Panic Attack Bust Dead Stars Dream of Destruction Prey 2. The Burying Beetle How We Are Made The Light the Living See The Dead Boy What I Want to Remember Overpass The Millionth Dream of Your Return Bald Eagles in a Field I'm Sure about Magic Wonder Woman The Real Reason The Year of the Goldfinches Notes on the Below Sundown and All the Damage Done On a Lamp Post Long Ago Of Roots & Roamers Killing Methods Full Gallop Dream of the Men A New National Anthem Cargo The Contract Says: We'd Like the Conversation to Be Bilingual It's Harder 3. Against Belonging Instructions on Not Giving Up Would You Rather Maybe I'll Be Another Kind of Mother Carrying What I Didn't Know Before Mastering The Last Thing Love Poem with Apologies for My Appearance Sway Sacred Objects Sometimes I Think My Body Leaves a Shape in the Air Cannibal Woman Wife From the Ash Inside the Bone Time Is on Fire After the Fire Losing The Last Drop After His Ex Died Sparrow, What Did You Say? Notes & Acknowledgments

Ada Limón is the twenty-fourth U.S. Poet Laureate as well as the author of The Hurting Kind and five other collections of poems. These include, most recently, The Carrying, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award and was named a finalist for the PEN/Jean Stein Book Award, and Bright Dead Things, which was named a finalist for the National Book Award, the National Book Critics Circle Award, and the Kingsley Tufts Award. Limón is a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, and her work has appeared in the New Yorker, the New York Times, and American Poetry Review, among others. She is the former host of American Public Media’s weekday poetry podcast The Slowdown. Born and raised in California, she now lives in Lexington, Kentucky.

Reviews for The Carrying: Poems

Praise for The Carrying Limon has a novelistic knack for scene, and the narrative lyrics in this remarkable collection, her fifth, could stand as compressed stories about anxiety and the body. -New York Times Exquisite . . . Limon is always a careful witness, accurately recording the moment, rather than trying to transcend it. Evocative dreams and pivotal memories help make this collection a powerful example of how to carry the things that define us without being broken by them. -Washington Post [In The Carrying] the National Book Award-nominated poet pens paeans to the world's limitless capacity to astonish. -O, The Oprah Magazine Limon is a poet of ecstatic revelation. Her poetry feels fast, full of detail, often playful, and driven by a conversational voice. This book represents a powerful deepening of the poet's perspective. . . . It's a book of deep wisdom and urgent vulnerability, driven by language that feels not only beautiful but permanent and powerfully wrought, like a mountain. It leads you to the beautiful bright mountaintop of language, then guides you gently down into the rocky valleys of a conscious human heart. -Tracy K. Smith, The Guardian Masterful . . . A piercing look into the nature of pain and impermanence . . . It is a paean to nature itself, to the peace in knowing it's both part of us and greater than us-especially when everything else in the world can seem like it's falling apart. -BuzzFeed With each poem in her new collection, The Carrying, Limon counterbalances her most paralyzing fears with her ability to find small twinges of hope. . . . Each poem is a widening lens of the world, an unburdening of the things we carry deep within ourselves. -Paris Review The Carrying is about the contradictory joys and burdens we all carry. . . . The societal connection between womanhood, motherhood and power is at the core of her work. . . . For Limon, carrying both the joys and sorrows of a child-free life is a testament to the human ability to exist with many things piled on our shoulders at once. -PBS NewsHour Tender, illuminating . . . The anxiety of all of life's realities permeates Limon's collection, which makes the work feel piercingly of the moment. -San Francisco Chronicle Limon's pitch-perfect fifth collection, The Carrying, is full of poems to savor and share. . . . She writes with remarkable directness about painful experiences normally packaged in euphemism and, in doing so, invites the readers to enter a world where abundant joy exists alongside and simultaneous to loss. -Minneapolis Star Tribune [Limon's] new collection is her best yet, a much needed shot of if not hope, then perseverance amidst much uncertainty. -NPR The Carrying is one of [Limon's] best. Even in poems about racism, misogyny, violence, and the darkness that often accompanies life, Limon's resiliency shines through. -Bitch For a book metered by grief, there's a lot of love here-that shouldn't come as a surprise, considering Limon's stylistic control and skill. . . . Limon is very good at pacing her poems to leave us satisfied but also curious. . . . One of the best books of the year. -The Millions Lyrical, tender, and knowing . . . Limon's poetry connects the personal and the universal. -Garden & Gun With the knowing directness of a letter, Limon's poems speak to the marrow of our everyday condition. . . . The Carrying is a vital collection for a noisy, brutal time. The power of Limon's unflinching examination of grief and loss is only surpassed by her love of beauty and compassion. -BOMB [Limon's] poems come closer than any poems have to Annie Dillard's essays. . . . She's that rarest of beasts, a poet who can take you by surprise. -New Criterion Deeply intimate . . . A poetry collection to help you make sense of the world right now . . . It's a spinning world that, increasingly, is turning to poetry like Limon's to make sense of - or, at least, to assuage the grief of - it all. -Bustle What drives her poems-what makes her new collection, The Carrying, so moving and masterful-is her dexterity with voice and diction and her giftedness with metaphor. It is her deep wellspring of surprising and evocative images and her syntactic superpowers. Most of all, it's her intellect and intelligence. The poems are keen reflections of a mind constantly at work, seeing and wondering and moving toward meaning but not always the meaning to which the poem and its reader thought they were headed. -Poets & Writers Limon's new poems in The Carrying are like a winter garden-somber, full of grief and patience, suddenly visible lines from here to there. To watch a poet in full possession of her power tending the earth with this kind of care feels like an inspiration that comes with a chastened edge: time, they remind, is all we have. -Literary Hub All of Limon's books have found a home on my bookshelf, each volume a heartfelt reckoning of what it is be alive. In her collections, I find a grace that demonstrates her versatility and wisdom as well as a `surrendering.' She explains that the central question of her work is, `How do we live in the world?' Yet she's a poet as comfortable with questions as with answers. -Guernica [Limon] might be the mom of Latinx poetry, and I mean that in the best way possible. . . . Limon is talented in a way that's both intimidating and inspiring, and is definitely a strong pillar of contemporary poetry. -Book Riot The Carrying delves into the deeply personal as the speaker uncovers what might be her infertility. . . . The book points us to look at all the things we ask of our bodies, all the things we ask it to carry through this remarkable and unstable world. -Chicago Review of Books Wisely observant . . . Limon's poems personify the twinned-narrative of despair and tenacity that has become part of America's current political and social reality. Indeed, The Carrying is a spark of courage in our dark and troubled times. -PANK Limon's work is a reminder that you can write poetry about big ideas. -America Exquisite poems about love, fertility, desire, this natural world we move through, the political climate, so much more. -Roxane Gay, Goodreads Superb. . . . Although the subject matter is often mournful, the endurance of nature also comes to light. Even though an individual may perish, there is consistency in the life cycles of bumblebees, dandelions, and race horses-all of which are examined with gorgeous language and imagery that makes Limon's collection hard to put down, even in the moments that cause a deep, sorrowful ache. -Chicago Review of Books This is the kind of poetry that strikes that rare balance: deftly crafted and profound but also completely accessible. The collection is about creation, death and everything in between, with so much attention to the thrumming world that just by reading it you become more aware, more in tune with the life around you. -BookPage Limon is one of the country's finest poets. . . . Honest, lyrical observations on love, loneliness, life, death and all the mysteries in between . . . She performs a near-miraculous feat in balancing razor-sharp imagery with deep ambivalence. . . . The Carrying beautifully conveys the power of poetry in an age that needs it most. -Shelf Awareness Limon teaches me that language can still surprise me. She shows me that the juxtaposition of words not previously joined can catch me off-guard, make me feel that shimmer of resonance, of curiosity. -Signature Gorgeous, thought-provoking . . . This fearless collection shows a poet that can appreciate life's surprises. -Publishers Weekly (starred review) A stunning collection . . . Limon writes movingly about finding the spectacular in the everyday. . . . A reverent, extraordinary take on the world. Don't miss this life-affirming collection. -Library Journal (starred review) A master of examining themes from unexpected angles, Limon rotates her topics in kaleidoscopic turns. . . . Page after page, this proves to be a startling and tender, magnificent collection. -Booklist Extraordinary . . . You realize that you witnessed something mesmerizing. -Foreword Reviews In her dazzling, precise, transformative collection, The Carrying, Limon offers us meditations on mortality, womanhood, the body, and that which grows in the earth, all the while slyly positing: How we should treat each other in this precarious life? Like humans, is her answer. Like humans. -Jami Attenberg, author of The Middlesteins In her powerful new collection, Limon asks: `What if, instead of carrying // a child, I am supposed to carry grief?' And later: `isn't there still something singing?' To which I say: yes. In these poems, joy and longing and grief sing with a music that-regardless of what I am burdened or blessed to carry-makes me want to live passionately and fully in the difficult world. The Carrying is a gift. -Natasha Trethewey It is no wonder that Limon's wonderful new book, The Carrying, is full of goldfinches and strawberries and dandelions and hostas and, as she writes, `all good things that come from the ground.' It's also no wonder that it's full of the life that death makes. And the living that dying is. For this book is a garden. And like a garden, it will nourish you. It will feed you. -Ross Gay


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