![]() ![]() He suggests redemption without ignoring the violence that attends it: “it’s never too late to become/ a new thing, to rip the fur// from your face and dive/ dimplefirst into the strange.” Akbar’s poems offer readers, religious or not, a way to cultivate faith in times of deepest fear: “it is not God but the flower behind God I treasure.” (Sept. The responsea wolf a wolfrecalls howling not only within the image, but in the sound of wolf, which is repeated the way cries are repeated. ![]() ![]() Addressing God, he pleads: “Do you not know how scary// it can get here?” Discussing embodiment, Akbar writes that “everyone/ looks uglier naked or at least/ I do,” while elsewhere exalting the body and its complex wants as “a mosque borrowed from Heaven.” A breathtaking addition to the canon of addiction literature, Akbar’s poetry confronts the pain and joy in denying oneself for the sake of oneself. These poems define life as an act of faith “so much/ of being alive is breaking,” yet we choose to go on. Though loss infuses the Divedapper founder and editor’s work, he animates myriad human struggles-addiction, estrangement from one’s body and language, faith and its absence-with empathy, intimacy, and expansive vision. ![]() “Regarding loss, I’m afraid/ to keep it in the story,/ worried what I might bring back to life,” writes Akbar as he opens his much-anticipated debut collection. Kaveh Akbar is the author of Calling a Wolf a Wolf and has received honors such as a Levis Reading Prize and multiple Pushcart Prizes. ![]()
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