Review Source: Independent
Book Author: William Archila
I have taught several poems by Salvadoran American poet William Archila. At the end of my American Literature class, we have discussed several of Archila’s poems. His poems are accessible but crafted and beautiful. He surprises his reader with language that invites the reader to a deeper understanding and empathy. William Archila’s poems have impacted all of my students, especially my Salvadoran students. Teaching in Washington, DC, I have a few Salvadoran students in every class and they have loved his poems. They’ve even sometimes taken them home to their parents. His poems work in the high school classroom. — Joseph Ross, language arts teacher, Gonzaga College High School, Washington, D.C.
Rough music is the first phrase I reached for in describing William Archila’s poems, early Coltrane or perhaps Sonny Rollins or Mingus as analogues. For his dominant (though certainly not exclusive) themes are the almost unspeakably violent world of his Salvadoran childhood and the struggles of immigrant life in the United States, and yet spiraling up repeatedly in stunning riffs of word-song is the rare thing called duende, marvelous in itself but also in its evocations of beauty to be found in the life fully lived, the struggle never abandoned. The Gravedigger’s Archaeology is an aesthetic and moral triumph, and I felt honored to have read it. — B.H. Fairchild, National Book Critics Circle Award winner
In his brilliant second book, The Gravedigger’s Archeology, poet William Archila excavates the cratered memory of war and its aftermath, his pen chiseling a language of “black roosters & fossil bones” in a lost country, “a country rift in half.” But Archila’s pen is also a spade, as poet Seamus Heaney suggested, and this spade unearths “the ribcage / still clinging to its shirt and bodies / dumped in a black lava bed.” This is clandestine territory for the lyric, but it is territory Archila traverses with consummate skill. I have been waiting many years for a book that would guide us through that time and place, exhuming the remains with grace and dignity. Archila has written it. — Carolyn Forché, poet
The Gravedigger's Archaeology by William Archila
Published by Red Hen Press on 2015
Genres: Central America, Poetry
Pages: 112
Reading Level: High School
ISBN: 9781597093712
Review Source: Independent
Publisher's synopsis:The Gravedigger's Archaeology writes the urban landscape of the US immigrant, a figure constantly reminded of the nameless and the dispossessed who struggle back home in Central America. Moving between past and present, these poems record a vigil of loss left by the emptiness of tedious excavation, both psychological and spiritual. They travel the fragments and vestiges of a war, the return to one's homeland or place of childhood, unearthing the landscapes of a jazz riff, myth, or work of art. In a lyrical, sometimes elegiac language, the poems map the complex territory of an exile who understands the answers lie in the ground.
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