Cover of Mosab Abu Toha: Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear

Mosab Abu Toha Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear

Poems from Gaza

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City Lights Publishers

2022

EPub
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978-0-87286-888-5

0-87286-888-5

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Winner of a 2022 Palestine Book AwardWritten from his native Gaza, Abu Tohas accomplished debut contrasts scenes of political violence with natural beauty.The New York TimesIn this poetry debut Mosab Abu Toha writes about his life under siege in Gaza, first as a child, and then as a young father. A survivor of four brutal military attacks, he bears witness to a grinding cycle of destruction and assault, and yet, his poetry is inspired by a profound humanity.These poems emerge directly from the experience of growing up and living in constant lockdown, and often under direct attack. Like Gaza itself, they are filled with rubble and the ever-present menace of surveillance drones policing a people unwelcome in their own land, and they are also suffused with the smell of tea, roses in bloom, and the view of the sea at sunset. Children are born, families continue traditions, students attend university, and libraries rise from the ruins as Palestinians go on about their lives, creating beauty and finding new ways to survive.Accompanied by an in-depth interview (conducted by Ammiel Alcalay) in which Abu Toha discusses life in Gaza, his family origins, and how he came to poetry.Praise for Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear:Mosab Abu Toha is an astonishingly gifted young poet from Gaza, almost a seer with his eloquent lyrical vernacular His poems break my heart and awaken it, at the same time. I feel I have been waiting for his work all my life.Naomi Shihab NyeThough forged in the bleak landscape of Gaza, he conjures a radiance that echoes Miosz and Kabir. These poems are like flowers that grow out of bomb craters and Mosab Abu Toha is an astonishing talent to celebrate.Mary KarrMosab Abu Toha's Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear arrives with such refreshing clarity and voice amidst a sea of immobilizing self-consciousness. It is no great feat to say a complicated thing in a complicated way, but here is a poet who says it plain: 'In Gaza, some of us cannot completely die.' Later, 'This is how we survived.' Its remarkable. This is poetry of the highest order.Kaveh Akbar

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