Poems between natural and human history, private life and death, and
about the crises of our century, from an acclaimed Italian poet.
Tacitus, the brooding historian of the Roman Empire, supplies the title
of Antonella Anedda's Historiae, in which she grapples with a legacy
of Mediterranean displacement and violence that stretches from antiquity
to the present day. Anedda writes about the aftermath of centuries of
colonization, about the ongoing European immigration crisis, and about
the wild Sardinian archipelago of La Maddalena and the teeming Roman
neighborhood of Trastevere--places between which she has divided her
life--in a wonderfully various collection where poems of community frame
poems of private life, among them a moving elegy for her mother. With
wit, insight, and economy, Anedda reminds us that history is plural and
that our perspectives, too, are constituted by pluralities--by events
both present and past, both world-shaking and exquisitely mundane.