Peace Maps by Karen K. Lewis

(3 customer reviews)

$14.99

 

“Poets are like cartographers” says Karen K. Lewis in Peace Maps. Through landscapes plagued by violence, drought and plastic trash, “fragments of poems remain, like tourniquets … to mend our fatal hemorrhage/ of despair.” She maps each poem to a specific place on earth, not only with discreet latitude and longitude coordinates, but also with love for the beings, human, animal and vegetable, that make a home there, and for the land itself.

–Maureen Eppstein, author of Earthward

 

“Humane and stirring, Karen Lewis‘s Peace Maps is a stunning cartography of the heart, charting new realms of loss and joy. Brave, honest, and clear, these vistas show us where we need to go.”

–Lisa Locascio, author of Open Me

 

 

 

 

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Description

Peace Maps

by Karen K. Lewis

$14.99, paper

978-1-64662-252-8

2020

Charting themes of globalization, cultural endurance, motherhood, solitude, inherited trauma, deep ecology, love, loss, and hope, the poems in Peace Maps invite readers on trails of actuality and possibility.

Karen K. Lewis lives in rural Northern California between the forest and the sea. She holds an MFA from Antioch Los Angeles and has traveled widely. Karen leads workshops with California Poets in the Schools and is a former Director of the Mendocino Coast Writers’ Conference. Her poems explore territory of physical and imaginary geographies, to map historical and personal moments of solitude, motherhood, loss, endurance, desire, surrender.

 

 

3 reviews for Peace Maps by Karen K. Lewis

  1. Karen Lewis

    Here’s a poem (a ghazal) from the collection.

    Summer Solstice Stargazing

    [39.303, -123.795]

    Night summons us to an abyss of rhymed imagination
    where instinct knots blue helixes to find imagination.

    I dream about the taste of summer’s moon and salty stars
    curled within courage of my daughter’s kind imagination.

    What song do migrating whales whisper? Ancient trees
    scatter sparks across damp sand, while oracles rewind imagination.

    Galactic prayers summon children born of love, not
    violence— along unexplored latitudes of blind imagination.

    Indigo nights delight the poet and her daughter,
    who listen for bronze chimes of infinite imagination.

  2. Karen (verified owner)

    Chaco Canyon
    [36.063, -107.964]

    The question of mesquite,
    near water, not far from fire
    and howling coyotes—a thirst
    twisting deeper than roots between
    boulders.

    The question of rock,
    where gray and blue sky
    whirl across circles of stones
    shaped twice: by earth, by hands—
    a settlement abandoned.

    A question of the lost egg
    from that rust-stained bird
    whose shadow stalks us—
    wings, feathers, empty sky,
    thorns.

    A question of snow
    sudden, falling in silence
    to cover our
    footprints.

  3. Mary Oak

    Read Peace Maps slowly, in order to savor each poem and allow its tastes to linger, its echoes to resound. I see these poems as a response to the question Karen invites in her first poem, “Where does your heart touch lightning?” Through honed and radiant words, she illuminates places that have struck her heart and strikes the reader’s heart as well. Her range of poetic forms kept me surprised and I was astonished by her vivid lexicon of colors. This is a book I will keep close at hand to dip into for inspiration.

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