Uprising / Alzamiento by Lisbeth Coiman

(1 customer review)

$19.99

 

Lisbeth Coiman is a dazzling new voice. With tender rage, she excavates what it means to love and grieve a homeland.”

–Ariel Gore is the author of Hexing the Patriarchy: 26 Potions, Spells, and Magical Elixirs to Embolden the Resistance and F*ck Happiness.

 

Lisbeth Coiman writes “Before I was born / A pristine future / streamed down from El Ávila tributaries” in the opening of her poem “El Guaire.” With these words and beyond, I am also taken to my point in history, the promise that we are all born into without knowing what’s to come, and how we are as individuals and as a collective, forced to reckon with a past that we are killing off to chase a promise of a better future. For immigrants, this carries a bigger weight, as we are both killers of self while our selves are so often the victims of a society that wants to kill us. Coiman’s collection is a deeply personal work that makes us revisit the guilts and the angers that we carry.”

–Chiwan Choi, author of The Yellow House

 

UPRISING/ALZAMIENTO es un libro desgarrador, sincero y nostálgico.  Se entremezclan  los recuerdos de infancia,  el exilio y los retos  de la enfermedad mental. Es además un testimonio de vivir y narrar entre lenguas.”

 –Nathalie Bouzaglo, editora de Excesos del Cuerpo, y autora de Ficción Adulterada.

 

“Weaving history, current events, and personal narrative, Lisbeth Coiman takes us on a vivid exploration of what it means to rise up, as a Venezuelan both within the country and from afar, as an immigrant in new lands, and as a woman in patriarchal societies. Longing and loss mix with resolve and resilience as Coiman teaches us that uprisings are never simple or painless, but that they can be beautiful and are almost always necessary on the path towards a more just world. Uprisings / Alzamiento is that “despertador en tu mesa de noche // Una campana en tus oídos” (“clock on your beside table // ringing in your ears”) we all need right now, waking us up to the urgent need to take action in the face of injustice even when — especially when — we are afraid of what might come next.

–Li Yun Alvarado, author of Words or Water”

 

 

 

 

Description

Uprising / Alzamiento

by Lisbeth Coiman

$19.99, Full-length, paper

978-1-64662-519-2

2021

Lisbeth Coiman is an author, poet, educator, cultural worker, and rezandera born in Venezuela. Coiman’s wanderlust spirit landed her to three countries—from her birthplace to Canada, and finally the USA, where she self-published her first book, I Asked the Blue Heron: A Memoir (2017). Her poetry and personal essays are featured in the online publications: La Bloga, Entropy  Acentos Review, Lady/Liberty/Lit, Nailed, Hip Mama Magazine, Rabid Oaks, Cultural Weekly, and Resonancias Literarias. In print media Spectrum v.16, The Altadena Literary Review, and Accolades: A Women Who Submit Anthology. An avid hiker, and teacher of English as a Second Language, Coiman lives in Los Angeles, CA.

Lisbeth Coiman es una autora, poeta, educadora, trabajadora cultural, y rezandera nacida en Venezuela. Su espíritu viajero la llevó a tres países – desde su tierra natal hasta Canadá, y finalmente a los Estados Unidos, donde publicó su primer libro, I Asked the Blue Heron: A Memoir (2017). Su poesía y ensayos personales se han publicado en revistas digitales como La Bloga, Entropy  Acentos Review, Lady/Liberty/Lit, Nailed, Hip Mama Magazine, Rabid Oaks, Cultural Weekly, y Resonancias Literarias; su escritura aparece en diversas antologías, Spectrum v.16, The Altadena Literary Review, y Accolades: A Women Who Submit Anthology, entre otras. Aficionada al senderismo, y maestra de inglés como segunda lengua, Coiman vive en Los Angeles, CA.

 

1 review for Uprising / Alzamiento by Lisbeth Coiman

  1. Laura Sturza

    In this wonderful book, author Lisbeth Coiman lays open her daily life and the life of those she left behind, as an ex-pat of the original homeland she loves, Venezuela. This timely collection lays bare the reasons so many risk their lives leaving their home countries in hopes of finding safety in the United States.

    Through raw, vivid images of the land and the people who live under constant threat of violence, we understand the survivor guilt that comes from having escaped a beloved birthplace, leaving behind family, friends, neighbors.

    I will remember
    The voices that held my hand in the dark
    And whispered
    I’m here with you

    The book includes the startlingly mature poems of her 19-year-old nephew, Felipe Itriago, still living in Venezuela—creating a haunting dialogue between aunt and nephew.

    The borders are paranormal and painful roads that people cross over rocks and concrete to survive, to escape

    I was so transported into the world Ms. Colman built, I found myself researching the history and landscape of the beautiful, torn landscape and people with whom she yearns to stay connected. Through her writing, she does hold them close. As readers, we can as well.

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