Moving from Paris to Beirut and back, Calligraphies is a tribute to
exiles and refugees, the known and unknown, dead and living, from the
American poet Marie Ponsot to the Syrian pasionaria Fadwa Suleiman.
Award-winning poet Marilyn Hacker finds resistance, wit, potential, and
gleaming connection in everyday moments--a lunch of "standing near the
fridge with / labneh, two verbs, and a spoon"--as a counterweight to the
precarity of existence.
With signature passion and agility, Hacker draws from French, Arabic,
and English to probe the role of language in identity and revolution.
Amid conversations in smoky cafes, personal mourning, and political
turmoil, she traces the lines between exiles and expats, immigrants and
refugees. A series of "Montpeyroux Sonnets" bookends the volume,
cataloguing months in 2021 and 2022 in which the poet observes a village
"in pandemic mode" and reflects on her own aging.
In a variety of tones and formal registers, from vivid crowns of sonnets
to insistent ghazals to elegiac pantoums and riffs on the renga,
Calligraphies explores a world opened up by language.