-Marcela Sulak, author of City of Skypapers and Mouth Full of Seeds
In this debut collection of poems, Batnadiv HaKarmi transports the reader to the lost world of European Jewry dispersed in the Holocaust. By turns haunting and mundane, HaKarmi gently intertwines the universal with the everyday. Poem by poem we are drawn along as bread is rationed, fathers disappear, children are lost, candles are lit, and God is accused. Invited on this journey are Abram, Rachel, Isaac, King Saul, and a witch or two. And at the center, HaKarmi's grandparents mourn and berate, struggle and survive. With a deft and steady hand, HaKarmi observes and records their lives and the effect their trauma has on those around them. These are poems of witness, but they are also poems of great beauty.
-Jane Medved, author of Deep Calls to Deep and Olam, Shana, Nefesh
Related Subjects
Poetry