Celebratory or eligiac, these poems record the author's two-headed journey to root herself - geographically and emotionally - in the world. Becker's poems are from remote and familiar outposts: the watery evanescence of Venice contrasts with the desert of the American Southwest; we lean with her over the rim of a canyon or stand back to study a Giacometti sculpture. From such settings arise poems on the death of a sibling, the consoling power of painting and sculpture; others celebrate the erotic and the capacity of the female body for pleasure and pain.
Celebratory or eligiac, these poems record the author's two-headed journey to root herself - geographically and emotionally - in the world. Becker's p...
Winner of the 1996 Lambda Book Award for Lesbian Poetry.
"With poignancy, honesty, and grace, Becker contends with the messy implications of her lesbian sexuality, Jewish identity, and sister's suicide. . . . Becker is acutely aware of, and devastated by, her many losses, but emerges defiant and admirably without regret or shame."
--Boston Review
Winner of the 1996 Lambda Book Award for Lesbian Poetry.
"With poignancy, honesty, and grace, Becker contends with the messy implications of he...
In "The Horse Fair," Robin Becker asks questions about citizenship and participation in the marketplaces of bodies, of ideas, of objects in which we function. She investigates how individuals marginalized by gender, religion, and sexual preference negotiate public and private spheres while inventing sustainable communities. Beginning with the great nineteenth-century French painter Rosa Bonheur, Becker has produced a number of multi-voiced, synthetic portraits, each within a framework of social history and a poetics of partiality she speaks from the persona of Charlotte Salomon, child of...
In "The Horse Fair," Robin Becker asks questions about citizenship and participation in the marketplaces of bodies, of ideas, of objects in which we f...