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Today's poem is "Holy Week, Acadiana"
from Acadiana

Black Lawrence Press

Nancy Reddy is the author of Double Jinx (Milkweed Editions, 2015), a 2014 winner of the National Poetry Series. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in 32 Poems, Blackbird, The Iowa Review, Smartish Pace, and elsewhere. The recipient of a Walter E. Dakin Fellowship from the Sewanee Writers' Conference and grants from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts Fellowship and the Sustainable Arts Foundation, she teaches writing at Stockton University in southern New Jersey.

Other poems by Nancy Reddy in Verse Daily:
September 20, 2015:   "Horses Dream of Horses" "May I call you..."

Books by Nancy Reddy:

Other poems on the web by Nancy Reddy:
"Saint Catherine Takes the Auspices"
Two poems
Four poems
Three poems
"Games"
Five poems
"Fervent Missive"
Three poems
"The Thibodeaux Girls"
"Before & After, Botched"
"Come Fetch"

Nancy Reddy's Website.

About Acadiana:

"The poems in Nancy Reddy's ACADIANA explore the disaster-ravaged Louisiana landscape that exists in 'the space of / after.' Ranging in location from the bayous to the levees to the I-10 expressway that cuts through the state, Reddy's poems meditate on the wreckage of the Gulf Coast and give us its story through the voices of women. How do we live now, she asks in the poem 'The Thibodeaux Girl Speaks, After,' 'with levees and spillways that hold the river / to its shores, with water / rising yearly in the gulf'? Reddy's poems reckon with these large questions with eloquence and urgency."
—Nicole Cooley

"In Nancy Reddy's ACADIANA, myths walk among us; their favor and their disdain are equally damaging. A woman whom 'the god has loved, however briefly' is 'sun-split,' and fit now only for prophesy. A sleeping girl might be 'still unharmed,' but harm, we know, is coming. These women and girls, touched by the disastrous divine, transform from mortals to sybils and back again, speaking truth with all the destructive power of a storm. Reddy says, 'The wrong gods/roar into our lungs now' but doesn't tell us which ones are the right ones. She knows there is no easy answer."
—Rebecca Hazelton

"It is Nancy Reddy's brilliance in ACADIANA to render the natural beauty and hostility of the Louisiana swamp in all its humid detail, while at the same time writing myths that transcend the bayou. These poems resound with zydeco and the howl of hurricanes, but it's the incantatory rhythms of sibyls and sirens that lead us from mystery to mystery. Here the gods—violent, alluring, electric with unspeakable passions—are never more than a storm, a spell, a spark away."
—George David Clark

"The poems in Nancy Reddy's ACADIANA are brewing with storms & spells, with 'swamp teeth,' sirens, sibyls, & sin. The soundtrack is made of wails, howls, screams, & weeping from women, prophets, & gods. These poems are poems of transfixion, tongues, and transformation; girls become women, women become birds, & birds swoop down to eat children. There is no mercy here, just the flooded landscape of sorrow. Reddy teaches us what new & broken worlds sound like, how to make music out of ruin, and how to navigate 'the space of / after.' ACADIANA will touch and leave you like a god—unharmed, but gasping."
—Meghan Privitello



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