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Quarantine Highway

di Millicent Borges Accardi

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971,987,993 (4.3)1
"From re-definition to re-calibration, the poems in this book are artifacts to the early and mid-days of the pandemic. Though not specifically labeled as "Covid poems," they strike to the heart of the universal yet individual struggles of solitude, confinement, justice, isolation and, ultimately, self-reckoning. The poems push and pull between the constantly knocking global news cycle to the stillness of a surreal inner world."--Provided by publisher.… (altro)
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Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
**I received this book as an Early Reviewer giveaway.*

This was a great collection of musings and reflections that, while rooted in the shared experience of going through COVID, explore deeper and more unique situations, as well. I enjoy the context offered at the end of the book, where the author shared that many of these poems were written as part of a writing challenge during the pandemic. The two poems that stood out to me the most were "What We Call Time" and "Until Beaten, My Wings." ( )
  bridgetisrad | Nov 15, 2023 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Disclaimer: I received a free copy of this book as part of an early review program. This was a delightful modern book of poetry. It is refreshing to read poetry written in such a fresh style about the world we as it has so recently been. I thoroughly enjoyed the references to other poetry, as well. Overall, this was a delightful read.
1 vota slandefani | May 26, 2023 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
I am writting this in lieu of a review. I am having 2 cataract surgeries in June. Until then I am only able to read ebooks. I should have realized that when I requested this but I didn’t think of it. I will review this book in July. Thank you.
  dianeham | May 15, 2023 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
I received this book as an early review, and I loved every page of Quarantine Highway. I don't typically read poetry; this is a refreshing contemporary poetry book. Anyone with memories of the year 2020 will appreciate the references to Door Dash, Clorox wipes, 6-foot social distancing, etc. Excellent collection of poems that feel familiar. ( )
1 vota chutchi | May 8, 2023 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Amid a global pandemic, these poems tease, surprise, and play even as they deliver soulful and deep insights - confronting our current realities, living with social distancing and face masks for protection and yet fearful and at the mercy of an invisible invader. Some poems delve into what we call normal times as well as developing connections to other poets in community through touchstone lines from their poems. At its heart, it is an exploration of what abnormal times can tell us about ourselves. ( )
  BooksForYears | May 2, 2023 |
Accardi’s poems capture the cultural moment and illuminate the need for a new set of rules for our assumptions that a mutual love between human beings is always at our fingertips. The notion that all will be well is simply a perfunctory state of mind. Love and joy cannot always save us, she writes in Broken Pieces: “The empirical /wish of a stupid requirement for happiness.” (3) But love is, nevertheless, a necessity: “Love is not a currency, neither is it an assignment./ … How can you not know/how to break through and touch me? Isn’t love/like drinking water for thirst …” (14)
 
Quarantine Highway is Accardi’s attempt to map where her mind traveled during a period of uncertainty and isolation. By using the time to examine how memories and other writers impacted her, she’s able to transcribe a period of time that will be under examination for years to come, while also encapsulating exactly the person she is in this specific time and place. It’s a manifesto of her survival and her identity in response to the pandemic, and its existence will demonstrate how to be led back to a place of safety.
 
The book is a credit to a synthesis of a learning experience where the poets shaped and re-shaped each other's interpretations of a world dominated by COVID-19.
 
The awe-inspiring imagery and emotional depiction that Accardi so talentedly presents engages the reader beyond merely the words on the page and instead presents a world seldom considered; the thoughts and workings of the inner mind that are often in a world of their own;

And, I am ashes, turning over to extinguish

the inevitable. My civility, apparent, having

a total hold on reality, shaken to ice once again.

Such imagery engenders a sense of unique introspection that transcends this collection and highlights the bold tenacity of Accardi and her whimsical words. As a whole Quarantine Highway is not a collection that is centred on the pandemic but a collection that speaks to the isolation, fragility and contrasting darkness and light that exists within all of us. This collection is one that should be savoured on dark nights of the soul where one seeks to truly understand their mind. This collection wrestles with the intimate and the banal and makes the reader all the better for ruminating in its genius.
 
Concerns about the future and the wish to survive mingle in Accardi’s poems, creating fresh ideas that reveal a wish for healing despite sufferings, disappointments, contradictions and unsettling scenarios. Her poetry is absorbing and reveals a persistent exploration into existence and the meaning of being human.
 
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"From re-definition to re-calibration, the poems in this book are artifacts to the early and mid-days of the pandemic. Though not specifically labeled as "Covid poems," they strike to the heart of the universal yet individual struggles of solitude, confinement, justice, isolation and, ultimately, self-reckoning. The poems push and pull between the constantly knocking global news cycle to the stillness of a surreal inner world."--Provided by publisher.

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Il libro di Millicent Borges Accardi Quarantine Highway è stato disponibile in LibraryThing Early Reviewers.

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