Love Cake by Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha


Love Cake
Title : Love Cake
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 1894770692
ISBN-10 : 9781894770699
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 97
Publication : First published September 1, 2011
Awards : Lambda Literary Award Lesbian Poetry (2011)

Poetry. LGBT Studies. Asian American Studies. In these poems, Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha explores how queer people of color resist and transform violence through love and desire. Remembering and testifying about the damage caused by the racial profiling of South Asian and Arab people post 9/11, border crossings and internal and external wars in Sri Lanka and the diaspora, LOVE CAKE also documents the persistence of survival and beauty--especially the dangerous beauty found in queer people of color loving and desiring. LOVE CAKE maps the joys and challenges of reclaiming the body and sexuality after violence, examining a family history of violence with compassion and celebrating the resilient, specific ways we create new families, take our bodies back, love, fight, and transform violence.


Love Cake Reviews


  • Ally Ang

    I really liked some of these poems but there was a lot of overly familiar imagery. Also, why does she use so much AAVE when she’s a Tamil and white person from Worcester Mass?

  • Jocelyn Schartiger

    I would give this book a 2.5 star rating. I chose this book as an opportunity to read work by a poet from a background that I am not super familiar with. I enjoyed getting an insight into a different perspective, but ultimately, the poetry was not my style.

  • M.W.P.M.

    Love Cake is divided into five parts: "serendib", "the kunju suite", "what is left", "coda: Sri Lanka 2009", and "remyth"...

    from "serendib"...

    1.
    Left our teardrop
    we grow green chilis and curry leaf in balcony pots
    in -35 degree
    Toronto and Montreal winters.

    2.
    When I flew the 27 hours home
    for the first time at 31
    I expected nothing
    and the red earth just opened
    right
    up.

    3.
    Sneaking down the hallway
    of the refugee Kennedy and Ellesmere highrise
    to do it in the stairwell with the cute Jamaican boy next door
    sleeping with your favourite cousin at the wedding
    not getting married till late or at all
    and
    you still love your folks
    you still love you.

    4.
    Discovering you can make cutlets out of Bumble Bee tuna from the bodega
    and ship Rainbow Sauce, good tea,
    seeni sambol, Maldive fish, jaggary and hopper molds
    to all the unlikely places in the world
    where Sri Lankan be, including:
    St Paul, Minnesota
    Las Vegas Connecticut doctor-lawyer town
    and Thunder Bay, Ontario.

    5.
    Me learning how to cook Sri Lankan food at 23
    from cookbooks in the library
    taking a name researched in books
    I don't know for sure is mine
    bu know for sure is not
    the Dutch East India employee
    who raped - I'm sorry, "married"
    - my great-great-great-great-
    grandmother
    who
    I know
    is mine
    unquestionably.

    6.
    Black August
    chopped bodies
    thick straight black hair burning
    Smell of tropical meat rotting
    and a thousand-year library in ashes.

    I am eight
    I am in Worcester, Massachusetts
    in my parents' backyard
    playing behind the peeling white-planked garage
    near the arbour vitas and the compost pile
    reading tall stacks of library books in a hammock
    a Lankan, a Tamil child
    blessedly alive.

    7.
    Now that the island hemorrhaging
    we need every drop of diaspora
    all those pure bloodlines?
    just rivers
    mushy in the wetlands
    jungle streams spilling down mountain to one sea.

    8.
    My grandmother's
    bared ankles
    her glare
    straight at the camera eye
    her mixed-race woman's
    aching slit fast legs
    mango booty running fast
    in my body I standing
    her life in mine
    one surviving bombed out
    lovely
    palm tree.

    9.
    My father lost his tongue
    but we make do with this one.
    - Sri Lankan resiliency miracle love poems 1-9, pg. 7-9


    from "the kunju suite"...
    when we rock we rock earth to earth
    belt buckle to pussy

    out bodies prayers to keep us here
    and when we pray we sing

    there is this earth underneath it all
    our cells spit molecules of home

    when you say I love you
    it's on purpose
    when you say I promise
    I believe you
    - rock, pg. 25


    from "what is left"...
    1.
    no more smoke and ashes
    honey welling up
    the centre of my palms

    2.
    yes I'm an affirmative action dater
    bu why would I spit in Oshun's face?
    that would be really, really stupid
    don't you think?
    - palms full of Oshun, pg. 57


    from "coda: Sri Lanka 2009"...
    & it's a lie. I want to write sri lanka
    instead I take a shower/I check my
    voice mail/I make my bed/I
    make my bad chicken curry.
    Watch The Real News and BBC World Service South Asia/Sri Lanka
    on internet. Repost. Sleep with someone unworthy of me.

    bad dreams later. unsent email. bravest I know
    fleeing. quarter million camp concentration resettlement
    they don't even know their names
    I say I'm trying to write you
    old sore
    emerald
    sister writes: my darling,
    sister, how are you? when I can sleep,
    my dreams are filled
    with shattered bodies these days.
    How do we survive this?

    - I say I'm trying to write about Sri Lanka, pg. 84


    from "remyth"...
    We own this house. or we don't own it,
    but I've lived here forty years now.
    we made additions. fixed the hole int he roof. had time, stories and bread.
    I lived to be an old woman and am still hot
    nobody own anything
    but I had time to put down roots
    and just live here.
    just
    live:
    We just live here.

    In the city of my imagination,
    I get to be surprised.
    I get to not know
    how the story ends.

    In the city of my desire
    nothing is perfect. oceans rose
    people died. people we loved and needed,
    they died. not how we wanted them to.
    perhaps the water stopped three blocks from my house
    because we made sea dislikes and magic
    and I jog by oil scented salt water every morning.
    or I didn't make it and I am a ghost that speaks to my grandchild
    who is living in toxic water like Farallon island tiger sharks
    still diving and grinnning next to cold war nukes dropped thirsty years ago:
    I look at her mutated, beautiful, persistent smile.

    In the city of my desire
    my diaspora settles like a nervous stomach after a ginger beer
    in the best tradition of my people,
    and I can see them whenever I want.
    to where roots stretch denrons
    They are allowed to grow
    to flourish
    and something new comes
    beyond the breaking open of empire
    and the IMF bloody wound crust.

    The city of my desire
    is my body
    I spent so long learning to love this crip body
    altered by trauma capitalism bled into my mother's stem cells
    bu things happened:
    my parents before dying are accountable for my childhood
    old carpet soaked rust belt toxins out of soil
    I got to rest as long as I needed
    so did every else
    whose bodies falling apart in the last days of desire
    and I limp and jog
    I and we the someones
    who didn't die

    The city in which I adore you
    is tricky. complicated.
    broken before we breathe it.
    all we have. our own genius,
    two or three things I know for sure, how genius we are raising $5,00 at a house party
    how tragic the inside of heart set on fire
    it's like arguing over monogamy versus polyamory -
    no matter how much I get irritated and compose brilliant Scorpio emails
    lambasting a lover's dumb ass, I know I can't get married.

    The city where I love you
    is only this: love storm. broken toxins.
    halfassed brilliant solution. oya wind. unknown child.
    my feverish tremoring body
    who had time to lie on a couch and write this best poem
    of cages crumbled sea walls holding
    drawing the maps crooked bleeding ink
    of the city we breathe towards cherished
    buoyant dream I reach for
    with you, kindred
    in this city where we live and desire, now
    body brown filled with broken gratitude
    breaking bread open breath
    - the city of my desire - after amir rabiyah and li young lee, pg. 95-97

  • Allison

    From my review in BITCH magazine: "If you haven’t read any of Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarsinha’s incredible feminist essays, you are missing out. Her poetry is as unflinchingly political as her nonfiction, but it also touches on more personal territory of her life as a queer disabled femme Sri Lankan artist. LOVE CAKE is a natural continuation of the themes from her 2006 debut collection, Consensual Genocide: racism, colonial occupation and resistance (“Hurricane”), sex, surviving abuse (“The Best Daughter”), and the importance of community (“sweetest thing/tierra sagrada"). With memorable references to literary icons Cherríe Moraga, bell hooks, and Sonia Sanchez, LOVE CAKE easily convinces readers that Piepzna-Samarsinha’s writing should be shelved right beside them."

  • Anna

    Piepzna-Samarasinha writes fluid, engaging poems that give voice to her lifelong resistance. Readers of contemporary poetry will appreciate her writing for its raw exactness. Readers of old school white men should appreciate her writing for the same exact reason. I'm curious about what gifts the next volume would bring.

  • Emory Black

    Leah shares personal history and exploration of self in this great collection of poetry. There are celebrations of people of colour, freedom and bodies.

    Content warnings:

  • Amanda

    3.75

    I liked that the writing style was more raw and straightforward; not so much bullshit, not flimsy and vague as poetry can be (although I enjoy that style as well sometimes)
    There was raw beauty and power and freedom and life in these poems, and I enjoyed it

  • Yas Necati

    Incredibly beautiful exploration of the relationship between love, war and identity. Brought me to tears more than once.

  • Vanessa

    Never felt more attached to a book of poetry in my life.

  • K. L.

    Okay content. Not my most-loved style.

  • Melinda

    I enjoyed these poems! I connected to her story even though her story is not mine. I usually don't enjoy poetry mainily because I never understand the allusions and what I'm supposed to take literally versus figuratively. I didn't have that problem with Love Cake. The poems were lyrical and straightforward. The descriptive words were relatable descriptions. I was there loving and struggling. Protesting and processing. Analyzing and educating. Emotional visibility is how I think of it. Queer of color experience made visible. So very good!

  • Niya

    The poet maintains a wonderful rawness to her work that comes through the lyricism of her work. This collection is a wonderful melange of observations of how power, violence and emotion etch themselves and communicate through the body. It takes what is usually percieved as the "other" experience - that of a very conventionally marginalized person (female, POC, queer) and presents it in a way that is relate-able without sanitizing it for consumption. It's the sort of collection that inspires the reader to create something for themselves.

  • Lauren

    If you are at all familiar with Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha's work then it will come as no surprise to you that this book of poetry is brilliant, sometimes funny sometimes heart wrenching and always always working your heart open as you read.

  • Liz Latty

    fierce femme fall out and get the fuck back up poetry. your life will be better for having read it.

  • Rabbit {Paint me like one of your 19th century gothic heroines!}

    This was a very interesting and well-written book of poetry. It is narrative and definitely raw when it comes to the author's life.

  • ACRL

    Read by ACRL Member of the Week Kenny Garcia. Learn more about Kenny on the
    ACRL Insider blog.

  • Avatara Smith carrington

    It was really a good read and truly interesting...

  • Vrinda

    This was an interesting collection with a unique perspective. In large part, not really my style though.