A Ten Peso Burial for Which Truth I Sign

Author:   Gabriel Palacios
Publisher:   Fonograf Editions
ISBN:  

9798987589045


Pages:   104
Publication Date:   12 March 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Our Price $47.39 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

A Ten Peso Burial for Which Truth I Sign


Add your own review!

Overview

In A TEN PESO BURIAL FOR WHICH TRUTH I SIGN, debut poet Gabriel Palacios slipstreams through a hauntological, historicized Southwest, to make sense out of the life inherited. Episodes of modern decay, violence and indignity co-mingle with the colonial horrors sometimes visited upon, and often committed by the ancestors of the author, who traveled from Basque Spain to the Southwestern border region in the Eighteenth-century. These are poems that reckon with complicity: historic and on the streets of South Tucson, Arizona in the present. This collection represents a prism through which we assess time, place, and the specters of one's own conduct and circumstances.

Full Product Details

Author:   Gabriel Palacios
Publisher:   Fonograf Editions
Imprint:   Fonograf Editions
Dimensions:   Width: 12.40cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 20.10cm
Weight:   0.159kg
ISBN:  

9798987589045


Pages:   104
Publication Date:   12 March 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

"""When someone asks me what a poet is, I answer: the one who changes (is changing) the definition of what a poet is. Gabriel Palacios, for example: he's an urban archeologist, hauntologist, holographer, oral cartographer, de-mosaicist, muralist, and all of these as a poet. A TEN PESO BURIAL is the evidence. It is both a book-length mural being painted on something that is always moving (i.e. constant traffic), and the study, years later, of that mural, through the scraping away of its faded mask to reveal the neon historama underneath, still in the process of being painted."" --Brandon Shimoda ""In A TEN PESO BURIAL FOR WHICH TRUTH I SIGN, Gabriel Palacios undertakes an ancestral reckoning, an accounting sketched across a city. 'I wanna touch/The oldest silver in your grandma's house/ Hear the version you know best, ' he writes. Centuries collapse in a sentence as Palacios' deft and lyric syntax guides us through a hotel ruin, a border region, and a family marked by a series of still palpable conquests. ('Is my seance in a shoebox locker poster Aztlan myth?') This is not just world building, but a lyric resurrection across the years and miles. Palacios' stunner of a debut collection is a vital reminder of the question: How much can we claim as inheritance from a world we reject?"" --Susan Briante ""A TEN PESO BURIAL FOR WHICH TRUTH I SIGN defies containment, resists explanation. Palacios writes from within the blink, in the glitched dark of eternal betweens, with the entwined laughters of engine oil & etymology. Codes of language switch with the muscle-memory of glitter, so words evolve into music right there on the page, spit onto the skin of your wrists to dry in the breath of the motel's air conditioning. A TEN PESO BURIAL FOR WHICH TRUTH I SIGN is for everyone who gives a shit about what poetry can say that words cannot say."" --Mathias Svalina"


"""A Ten Peso Burial For Which Truth I Sign defies containment, resists explanation. Palacios writes from within the blink, in the glitched dark of eternal betweens, with the entwined laughters of engine oil & etymology. Codes of language switch with the muscle-memory of glitter, so words evolve into music right there on the page, spit onto the skin of your wrists to dry in the breath of the motel's air conditioning. A Ten Peso Burial for which Truth I Sign is for everyone who gives a shit about what poetry can say that words cannot say.""--Mathias Svalina ""In A Ten Peso Burial for which Truth I Sign, Gabriel Palacios undertakes an ancestral reckoning, an accounting sketched across a city. I wanna touch/The oldest silver in your grandma's house/ Hear the version you know best,"" he writes. Centuries collapse in a sentence as Palacios' deft and lyric syntax guides us through a hotel ruin, a border region, and a family marked by a series of still palpable conquests. (Is my seance in a shoebox locker poster Aztlan myth?"") This is not just world building, but a lyric resurrection across the years and miles. Palacios' stunner of a debut collection is a vital reminder of the question: How much can we claim as inheritance from a world we reject?""--Susan Briante ""When someone asks me what a poet is, I answer: the one who changes (is changing) the definition of what a poet is. Gabriel Palacios, for example: he's an urban archeologist, hauntologist, holographer, oral cartographer, de-mosaicist, muralist, and all of these as a poet. A Ten Peso Burial is the evidence. It is both a book-length mural being painted on something that is always moving (i.e. constant traffic), and the study, years later, of that mural, through the scraping away of its faded mask to reveal the neon historama underneath, still in the process of being painted.""--Brandon Shimoda"


Author Information

Gabriel Palacios was born in Tucson, Arizona and earned an MFA from the University of Arizona, where he was the recipient of the Minnie Torrance Award for Poetry, selected by giovanni singleton. He works as a college writing instructor and serves as a contributing editor for Diagram. His work has appeared in The Volta, New Sinews, Annulet: A Journal of Poetics Denver Quarterly, Poetry Northwest, The Brooklyn Rail, Typo Magazine, and elsewhere.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

Aorrng

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List