A History of Kindness by Linda Hogan


A History of Kindness
Title : A History of Kindness
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 1948814250
ISBN-10 : 9781948814256
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 140
Publication : First published June 2, 2020
Awards : Colorado Book Award Poetry (2021)

Poems from Linda Hogan explore new and old ways of experiencing the vagaries of the body and existing in harmony with earth's living beings.


A History of Kindness Reviews


  • s.penkevich

    I am a warrior
    wanting this world to survive,
    never forgotten…


    In Linda Hogan’s newest collection, A History of Kindness, she takes a long look at a history filled with colonialism, oppression and death and responds to it with beauty. This is a collection to look up to and learn from, a collection of words that soothe the soul while simultaneously holding the evils that lurk in mankind accountable for their atrocities. There is a tender love to her words--even when they stand powerfully in defiance of oppression--that will shake you to your core. These are poems that give honor to the world, all the animals and plants and landscapes, and press us to be more responsible with them and each other. ‘Power eats the world,” she writes, yet offers a hopeful future if we can listen to the stories of old, learn and speak the name and live sustainably in harmony with the natural world.

    I want to be more that one brief life
    that will become frail, but rather a journey
    over plains, glaciers, and oceans,
    with people whose language
    has no past tense, so we forgive
    and continue to tell happy stories
    of where we have traveled
    beyond this place.


    This passage from Distance Not Time is a perfect reflection on the beautiful softness that permeates this collection. A softness that is as disarming as it is empowering and fills your heart past the point of overflow. A poet that can identify and embody ‘the sweetness of his grief,’ as she writes of a man mourning a woman he never knew. Linda Hogan, is a Chickasaw writer whose work and activism celebrates indigenous culture and sustainable relationships with the environment and these themes echo loud and clear through her poetry. She writes of the animals that grace our world and how even a stone ‘tells the story of what happened here’ to remind us that the natural world speaks in its own language. We just have to find a way to listen.

    This land, I watch over it,
    The place with ancient stories


    Hogan is a natural next step into poetry for the many readers who enjoy
    Mary Oliver but don’t know where to go next in the poetry world. This is poetry that embodies the natural world and all its joys, but also has a deep message of justice and perseverance in the wake of history. There is a powerful discourse of land stolen and people massacred for power and conquest, there are poems of lost languages and lost children, but in the end this collection feels like a calming and encouraging embrace. As the US Poet Laureate
    Joy Harjo says 'Hogan's poetry has always been a medicine of sorts.' This is about looking for hope, accepting change, and using that to change the world for the better. This has been an excellent year for new poetry, though this volume may be the one that was most needed to fight the terror of existence in a country full of violent history. Linda Hogan is a gift and a voice that we should all listen to.

    4.5/5

    Even the earth knows these veins
    That run like rivers
    Of sweet water into countries
    Great one day, gone the next,
    Or flowing into one
    Another to create something new.

  • Elyse Walters

    It’s been a long time since I’ve read a collection of poems....but today while resting - staying indoors - windows closed due to the smoky fires all around us - I was reminded of a lovely review by another Goodreads member...s.penkevich.
    I immediately was drawn to ‘the title’ ...”A History of Kindness”......[as in *kindness*].

    This is my first introduction to Linda Hogan....( the timing of connecting with her verses is fitting with what we are dealing with - the fires - here in Northern California)....
    The themes Linda weaves together: body, family, ecology, and animals —-are relevant to what we are facing with our 300 burning fires...with 60,000 people-evacuations.
    Linda Hogan underlines the importance of fighting for our planet. She points to the dangers and inspires kindness....empathy.....
    compassion......love and hope.....and intentions.

    “When I was a girl the old woman told me if I were always generous I could paint a part in the middle of my hair with red.
    Red ochre. Red paint. Red lipstick some even used.
    But it seemed not right to reveal to the world that I was generous,
    As if the announcement takes it back.
    So, unlike other girls, I appeared selfish even if I gave so much away.
    Who would have known I gave my buckskin dress, my leggings and moccasins, beaded so well, even the silver bands for my hair.
    I think of the many red parts, even the parting of the sea by Moses leading his people in a never-ending story, or parting in the red stem of the plant for healing bad lungs, the splitting of the heart when one side works against the other and the veins in their miles flow back again and again.
    But the red part I recall the most had to do with the generosity, and then our giving up the taken land and forest to those who wanted it so.
    We parted with our clothing, our families, and on our way we left the read farewell of a blood trail along the land we walked, writing that became the book coming after us with words of truth”.

    “I am just wishing to take life up from the earth to make this my own living not by the hour, a month, or year.
    I don’t want to live by time, but by acre, mile, or maybe the mist stretched over a lake early one morning in the mountains.
    I want to be more than one brief life that will become frail, but rather a journey over plains, glaciers, and oceans, with people whose language
    has no past tense, so we forgive and continue to tell happy stories where we have traveled beyond this place”.

    Beautiful poems....
    About
    Children, clouds, sunshine, wildflowers, mountains, birds, bisons, hiding places, mothers, fathers, other animals, tiny creatures of earth, trees, valleys, rivers, memories, music, the holy sky, our planet, ancient stories, silence, pearls of wisdom, death, love, and eternity.

    “When you walk through fires, you will not be burned”

    A lovely graceful collection of poems to embrace and reflect.

    Thanks s.penkevich

  • Patricia

    I'll start with how carefully Weller Book Works packed this to send it to me. Then the craft that Torrey House Press put into the book, the more substantial-than-usual cover, the heft and deep cream of the pages.
    From one favorite poem, " The Pine Forest Calls Me"
    I remember one poet taking a branch of pine
    from the winter forest to his dying sister.
    It was all she wanted in her last moment.
    I have never forgotten the snow dripping
    from that branch to the floor.

  • Linda Brunner

    I really appreciate Linda Hogan's works. They name what's truly important.

    From the book:
    Once I was told you become what you think
    so I think the gone animals back,
    the ivory billed woodpecker,
    the river of sharp teeth,
    swimming black turtles shining,
    all that fell
    from this life I name Whole.

  • Rae

    Chickasaw. Creation. Burying a horse. A blind cat. Good for the soul.

  • Judy

    Her latest book of poetry (2020), a beautiful collection so far. I am reading them very slowly, one at a time often days apart, picking the book up and opening it to a random page, so I am getting them in no pre-determined order, unless you count fate, of course. :-)

  • Mariella Taylor<span class=

    I'm a little bit in love with this collection. Of all the poetry I've read in the last few years, this is definitely in the top five, possibly in the top two. There's a heart and body to this collection that I don't often see, even in truly enjoyable poetry.

    A History of Kindness is not a book that can be explained in a few words any more than it could be explained in many. Composed of five sections— “The Body Life,” “The Old Mother,” “The Radiant Field,” “The Other Country,” and “The Current Veins”—Hogan’s collection weaves a brilliant correlation of truth and lore, past and present, pain and tenderness, to guide the reader toward the idea that we can create in ourselves and our land a kinder future. Hogan, a Chickasaw author, writes of both far and recent past in her poems successfully drawing together images of the creation of the world, Moses and the Red Sea, the Trail of Tears, and the growth of ivy through a childhood fence to present to the reader an inclusive desire for wholeness.

    An image that she often returns to is that of the body—how each piece of history informs the choices that create our steps forward, just as each system of the body informs and guides the next. One of my favorite poems in the collection is entitled, “The Red Part.” It describes a coming-of-age custom for young women in which they are entitled to use certain colors of paint in their hair to signify the type of person they have become.

    In Hogan’s portrayal of this custom, a red part in one’s hair defines that person as being generous. The poem dictates the back-and-forth ideals of generosity and selfishness, false humility and true loyalty, guiding the reader on a journey through the gains and losses of the Native American people. She shares how, just like the mind leaves a trail of learned reactions and reminders for the body, the history of the actions taken and choices made in the past informs the cultural wounds and unease of the present.

    However, Hogan does not stop there. In this poem, the ending may yet be sorrowful, for Hogan writes, “We parted with our clothing, / our families, and on our way/ we left the red farewell/ of a blood trail along the land/ we walked, / writing that became/ the book coming after us/ with words of truth.” But, in other poems, Hogan grants us reminders for a hopeful future, reminders that while the past informs the present—neither dictate the future. She pleads with her readers to “be like the animal that opens hardness/ and carries inside a pearl or a goddess/ that steps out to a new human accord.”

    Well...you didn't come here to see me ramble on and on and start mini dissertations, I'm afraid I've certainly left one. Whoops.

  • Seth

    Poetry recommendation: A History Of Kindness by Linda Hogan. As the title of this book suggests, many of these poems has some sort of element of kindness, gratitude or a feeling of connection. The poems hold empathy. That connection for Hogan, a Chickasaw poet, is with nature, heritage and history. And in plain language, she creates all sorts of wonders with her language. Each section focuses on something different. I love how Hogan writes about body image and the connection to her past and beloved family members. I also love the way she can find small moments of kindness and turn them into poems, like when a deer gently rests its head on her. Not all the poems are happy, however. There are reckonings with violent pasts. Police brutality. And a poem about burying her beloved horse. Even in these tone shifts I see some insight about how Hogan views the world. I think there’s a lot we can learn from her.

  • mumtaz

    such a beautiful, poignant, reflective journey through Hogan's inner and outer worlds (and their convergence). very grateful I was transported through this journey into states of meditation, joy, grief, and hope <3

    (she ate btw)

  • Cheryl

    This life of mine may be humble, but is rich in love, trees, and waters…I am in love with this land, the animals, all the growing life and the water passing through here, with the trees speaking in the wind outside the windows…Thank you Home, Land, Soil, Trees, and History.”
    —Linda Hogan, Koihouma, Chickasaw Old Turtle Clan

    These poems accompany on my path of trying to think indigenously like Doug Good Feather asked, and to learn to be indigenous to this place as Robin Wall Kimmerer asks, and tie into reading Circe this year and even Edna St. Vincent Millay who also has a poem named Recuerdo. Vine Deloria in his seminal God is Red talks about the religion the land engender and creates, and I see it now. I used to think, in a more literal way, that the Christian God should have been left back where Christianity began, and that is part of what he says, that it can’t thrive here, that no transplanted religion can; but it is not that the American Indian views of the Creator prevent it from happening, but that the land and place create its own and looking and listening for it is all you have to do. It takes no books or prophets, really, but there are sages and wisdom poets like Linda Hogan to guide the way when you need it.

    I sense that Hogan’s life has been filled with trauma, and my heart breaks that she is the most kind poet I have ever encountered, and inspires us to be kind and witness her pain, the truth of what was done to American Indians from the government, and the wisdom here, everywhere, ours for the learning. The European colonizers were not kind, but the poet still sings of a history of kindness that is her song, and I am so grateful to hear it. It is steeped and percolated through the nature I revere, and I will strive to hear this call:

    “The fingers have their own aims,
    to make beauty, to touch softly something to live by.
    In the distance between hand and soul
    lies the history of this continent.”


    When the Body

    When the body wishes to speak, she will
    reach into the night and pull back the rapture of this growing root
    which has no faith in the other planets of the universe,
    but her feet have walked in the same bones of the ancestors
    over long trails, leaving behind the oldest forest.

    The body is so finely a miracle of its own,
    created of the elements of anything
    that lived on earth
    where everything that was
    still is.

    About Myself

    I come from a land once plenty.
    I came from the caves of a world,
    and tall grasses where earth rises
    and falls as the ribs of a body,
    bones all in their hiding, but also
    as water rises and falls like breath
    with salt water tides following the phases of moon.

    Lost in the Milky Way

    Some of us are like trees
    that grow with a spiral grain
    as if already prepared for the
    path of the spirit’s journey to
    the world of all souls.

    This is only the first of our cosmic maps. There is another
    my people made of what is farther beyond
    this galaxy. It is a world that can’t be imagined by usual means.
    After the first, it could be a map of forever.
    It is a cartography shining only at certain times of the year like
    a great web of finery some spider pulled from
    herself to help you recall your true following, your first breath in the dark cold.

    From between stars are the words we now refuse;
    loneliness, longing, whatever suffering might follow
    your life into the sky. Once those are gone, the life
    you had against your own will, the hope, even the
    prayers take you one more bend around that river of sky.

    What We Kept

    We had mountains
    and you took down
    the trees so that rain
    felled the mountains.
    It was once enchanted
    with the song of golden
    winds, the silk thread of river,
    pollen from the medicine flowers you took.

    The more you took,
    the more you lost.
    And you need us now
    the way you needed
    us then, our land and labor,
    and we give to you
    knowledge you don’t hear,
    the new mind you can’t accept,
    But what I keep to myself, for myself,
    is the soul you can never have that
    belongs to this land, the magic haunting
    you still and always untaken,
    but you want, how you want,
    how you need.

    Recuerdo

    Let me take it through my heart again,
    that unchanging moment,
    you wading through the river,
    me wading toward you, laughing,
    the illumination of that moment,
    the shine of our skin,
    the clouds coming toward us,
    the sky beings who live above
    with tears ready to fall like the origins of rain;
    shining like a constant, ceaseless stream of water
    as it crawls across earth changing and passes
    blood memory, salt water memory, toward our
    laughter and joy that moves once again through this heart.

    The Feet and Where They Travel

    Let me start with my feet. One holds a curved
    and graceful line for the loving artist’s eye to follow,
    a warm hand to touch.

    Down from the Sky

    I live here in the forest.
    I try to warm myself with wood
    from broken earth, thankful to
    look out on this tribal land where
    we were the nightmares of others,
    savages of spiritual wisdom
    come from dreamers
    and those who prayed to makers,
    to creators, to earth mothers and
    to water in different languages,
    speaking, hoping with such
    intelligent words this world
    would never fall. Just think,
    what we did rise from, after all,
    To reach this place,
    And how do I find it
    Still whole.

    The Fingers, Writing

    The hands have their reasons
    unknown to the heart,
    a needed touch,
    the kindness of another skin.

    The fingers have their own aims,
    to make beauty, to touch softly something to live by.
    In the distance between hand and soul
    lies the history of this continent.

    Creation

    I am from a line of songs,
    a piece of history told by our people.
    In every gully lies the power of a forest song
    waiting to begin, the first ones sang when they crossed into this existence
    and down to the canyon where I live.
    I dreamed they passed the creek-bed,
    each canyon wall, the stones I love,
    lichens growing on them,
    the route I go to the river where bear also fish.
    It is hard for some to know the world is a living being.

    The Pine Forest Calls Me

    I remember how it has grown these years.
    Yet the spring pinecones are still young,
    soft and gentle as skin to the touch.
    It is always the green season here,
    even with future amber formed golden
    from bark with the scent of animal life
    that passed through. If a traveler
    should pass by, it summons,
    Stop, come in, stay…
    It is what I want, too,
    for myself to be taken to this world
    my own life passed through as it does now
    in the shadows where sun filters in to melt snow,
    quench earth, that water dripping from trees.

    How I love this forest,
    where the hieroglyphs
    of insects work the inner
    layers of bark like monks
    writing unseen in deep silence,
    and if you know the true secret of
    falling you might summon that magic language.

    Embodied

    I am embodied
    first by the numbers
    given my grandparents as,
    trembling, they signed the Dawes Act.
    Outside under the moving night sky
    I wonder what it is to be made
    of this continent from the beginning.
    I came from the salt and water
    of those before me before the
    creation of zero, and then those
    numbers given my grandparents
    by the American government
    and names that belonged to others.
    The past we have not forgotten.
    They said you only pass on the
    people’s story by telling it.
    You keep it by giving it away.
    So I do. For children of this land,
    yesterday is close as today.

    Walking by Stolen Creek

    The meaning of its name forgotten,
    the word remembered.
    Whatever happened here is recalled
    in another time and it’s remembered
    inside the stolen self that my blood
    river passes through in thin and beautiful veins,
    not gold but only a mere human heartbeat,
    a circle of people standing, talking, making
    their plans as water passes by.
    Something, someone is still alive,
    telling. They think these are only
    stories not what holds the world
    together in its balance.

    Old Mother

    Sitting on the large stone Old Mother says,
    I feel it breathing. And it is, as if she opened
    the world life where everything does
    breathe like the waves of far ocean
    taking in air, giving out the cloud waters
    passing over us right now.
    The bison breathed this air, she says,
    and people from other nations.
    Don’t you hear it
    all singing, even the stars above
    hidden by daylight, the waters beneath us,
    and the first cry of your children when they arrive
    from the birth waters to air.
    She is the one
    showing a way
    as she points her feather.
    Every path is right, she says.
    It matters not which one you follow,
    just breathe and sing as you
    pass along, loving every other traveler.

    Watching Over

    This land, I watch over it,
    the place with ancient stories,
    the plants of medicine, the place
    where mountain lions walk down the hill
    and look in on the light of my life
    in this little cabin made of happiness,
    of stone laid on stone so perfectly
    a hundred years ago, the year
    before my father was born.
    In this valley of trees and river
    and crystal, the fault lines of history broke.

    Distance Not Time

    I am just wishing to take life up from the earth
    to make this my own living
    not by the hour, the month, or year.
    I don’t want to live by time,
    but by acre, mile, or maybe the mist stretched over a lake
    early one morning in the mountains.
    I want to be more than one brief life
    that will become frail, but rather a journey
    over plains, glaciers, and oceans,
    with people whose language
    has no past tense, so we forgive
    and continue to tell happy stories
    of where we have traveled
    beyond this place.
    But before I am able to tell this to children
    a spring breeze comes from far
    through the open window
    carrying the smell of sage and sweet grass.
    So now I need you to know the mystery,
    that neither of these grow here, not in this place.

    God of the Prairies

    What name is the god of the prairies,
    in this place so large and humble, so filled with medicines
    and even the tunneling creatures of earth
    being the ones who call down rain.
    Beneath this richness are rivers, a lake underneath.
    Children, that water below was what I wished for you,
    more water than remains,
    here where no one of us is superior
    to the minions of insects, the butterflies
    coming to the plants, the wealth of wings,
    and at the golden march, the flash of red.
    I was born to this,
    singing or telling a story to tall grasses,
    the horses, alive and listening as they are,
    and evening hearing the past dark thunder
    of bison running down the distance
    fighting back their hooves.
    This land is honest, at least,
    and the other creatures never lie,
    all those many gods of the prairie,
    here, in this place, and the stand of trees
    down near the river, trees not yet cut,
    so no drought there,
    not yet.

    The Writing of Snow

    Snow is a book of history
    writing its new language,
    changed moment by moment,
    but I read the tracks I find before the wind.
    Here a flatness passes through
    with claw marks on each side,
    the tail of a beaver that slipped into the water
    that wishes not to be petrified as ice
    so the currents turn it crystal instead,
    ice in beautiful turrets,
    formations of geology,
    layered, some old, some deep.
    The story is newly changed
    each day as I come read the tracks of the living,
    bobcat, deer prints like punctuation,
    and wonder, like the mysteries in a human,
    what creatures, what songs, what countries,
    swim beneath it all, or above and the sky...

    The Long Clouds

    Once I swam through one of these
    beneath the earth, inside another element.
    At times clear light came from above
    into the blue world that nurtures
    the curve of this earth returning to itself,
    like the rainbow serpent holding itself
    Called down by trees, fallen through the
    leaves of rainforest back to earth,
    pulled up through roots,
    up through the canopy are long clouds
    of the world, long clouds becoming
    water to be carried over the dunes.
    How we all want love, even the waters,
    so let them be healthy and clean,
    let us be carried alive on the water of a planet,
    along with it,
    not just by it,
    but for it.

    Home on the Island

    The wind in this country is magic
    with its history as the element
    that drove men to the seas, lost
    on islands, and if they found home,
    they left it again. That’s when I see
    the house on the island,
    alone in its water wilderness
    of the unseen beneath,
    unknown fishes swimming
    I could call it home, this tiny island in the wind.
    Perhaps it is the evergreens or black stone,
    the walkway of wooden sticks that
    seem afloat from here to there in the
    wind-curling water. I ask my friend,
    Could you live on the sea that way?
    He says, It’s wonderful.
    Maybe I will meet Circe one day. I think,
    What about the singing at the loom
    and the men who were transformed?
    But beneath this walk, the fish,
    the small octopus. You know I can’t help
    but feel something that alive inside.
    All my lives could be here.

    Sky Above a Crumbling World

    And still the sky so beautifully deep,
    clouds so constantly changing.
    The fluid language of the past
    still crosses above the world,
    and an ancient ocean dwells
    around each sacred land,

    River Singing

    We rained from the water of our mothers,
    born to the river passages of each life.
    We grew up from the cradle of a river,
    the sweetness of the taste of spring when rains arrive
    and the river enters trees in the first turn of green,
    our lifeblood traveling
    to the unknown bends of tomorrow.
    Tributaries, arteries, veins, we are the river,
    sometimes weeping, sometimes laughing
    in this brief life and we can’t help it but we love
    other waters, opening glorious into one another.
    The world, the waterways we are travel in ways
    you can’t tell from others. The heart of earth
    beats gently, but the song of a river is carried
    even under the ground, its own heart set on
    great ocean waters. Some days I wonder
    how anyone is content on plains, on mountains,
    but then doesn’t water live everywhere beneath
    our feet as it journeys from one holy site to another?

    To Be Held

    To be held
    by the light
    was what I wanted,
    to be a tree drinking the rain,
    no longer parched in this hot land.
    To be roots in a tunnel growing
    but also to be sheltering the inborn leaves
    and the green slide of mineral
    down the immense distances
    into infinite comfort and the land here, only clay,
    still contains and consumes
    the thirsty need
    the way a tree always shelters
    the unborn life and waits for the
    healing after the
    storm which has been our life.

    Water Gods of the Next World

    This is a time when I wonder if we did truly enter the fourth world
    as they say, or if that time is yet to come, because we entered
    this world for peace. I ask the man whose teachers are clouds;
    they live in caves and mountains. They live in thick forests and
    some of them come out through broken windows of houses
    made with round stones. Others come from the crashing waters
    where seas converge, the Pacific and Atlantic with the Southern.
    Cloud teachers and water sages wear white. Sometimes
    they live with the world of birds. When they pass over this world,
    they see suffering and they weep rain. The good man tells me,
    If you climb the peaks, sometimes you hear them singing.

    Clouds are people I don’t know except they are mostly
    humble crossing our sky. Still, I want to know if we have
    yet another realm to enter, to emerge from our ways of living now,
    to climb a reed, or leave our crystal cave. I thought the goddesses
    of clouds and gods of rain were merely the breath of wind, but
    some are the story of storms held back too long from telling
    they’ve seen how hard the world has grown. In the beginning,
    before there were flower people, before bees, were birds and sky.

    There was no land. Birds rested on water held by clouds.
    For others, a miraculous spirit was born in the presence of animals,
    like the rest of the poor with an earth but no clean water to drink.
    Tree Woman arrived. She planted and rooted and changed
    the course of water so life could go on without illness.
    For this they were grateful. These are only a few of the stories
    and songs that exist. All are true. In the dry land corn waits
    for the holy presence of clouds and human beings
    dance barefoot on hot earth with their love for rustling corn.
    Others live in the the place where waters meet,
    where the people climb mountains with the deer to watch
    those clouds fly in, dark, full, ready to give birth, and
    soon the water breaks and it flows.

    Grace

    Waking on the edge of morning, still dark,
    the owl speaks one last word,
    and I hear this world
    from the other side of daylight
    and go to sit at water, with great knowledge
    of the eloquent speeches water makes,
    watching for the trout in the next uplift from water,
    and hear the insects, their music great as any,
    meaningful as frogs before a rain.
    Then it comes, gentle rain.
    That is what makes for grace
    and I can believe in such softness.
    None of the miseries of the world
    are meant for me, not this morning...
    If you ask each day,
    the continent is moist
    with multitudes of life
    beginning every moment.

    In that first edge of morning,
    let’s embrace the birds, the air,
    the once again world as it grows
    in this manner and, like us all,
    needs embraced
    For everything that has been hurt.

    The Current Veins of History
    Are open
    as worlds
    and borders
    redefine themselves.
    We wish for some new seed
    of vision so the world may grow
    if only for a moment silent, wordless,
    and fresh as a bare room with windows open.

    Even the earth knows these veins
    that run like rivers of sweet water
    into countries great one day,
    gone the next, or flowing into one another.

    As we are silent in this moment,
    to be a friend, no weapon,
    not even arrows of words,
    just easy human waters together.
    Be like the animal that opens hardness
    and carries inside a pearl or like a goddess
    That steps out into a new human accord.

  • Paul

    Haunting indigenous images and memories/collection of poems/poetry and stories light this history of kindness: “the majestic endangered missing / the beautiful gone. // Absence is the missing presence / that travels everywhere at once.” (“Absences” 122)

    “You felt something follow you, / the living person inside, / and you have heard this voice for years / like a bell, invisible as air, / clear as a gentle rain / in that delicate slippage / so like the skin, permeable, / a thin line between what you believe gone / and what is still present.” (“Haunting” 117-118)

    “after the ocean fell / from between her legs like rain. // And for that single measure, some vision large enough / to encompass all the great terrain of the future.” (“Fawn” 126-127)

    “The white deer leaps the dirty river. / I follow in the wake of it, / the deer so like a cloud / I know she is more than a guide, / so perhaps she is partly / the way of milk, such sweetness, / the mothering sky, / the great countenance of spiral, of animals / from our earth, the milk of forever / an infant will seek. // … right here, right now, / you have to ask, / how often do you see it, / how often does it come to you, / how often, really, do you follow?” (“White Deer, Your Direction I Follow” 131-132)

    “Here Is” (135)

    “The Current Veins of History” (136-137)

    Read and weep for joy.

  • Élise

    2.5 stars
    This kind of poetry is not for me, it must be my personal taste but I like more "structured" poems; although pretty and quite evocative, these often didn't even read like poetry but some seemed more like prose to me. I found the poems to be cohesive, and I enjoyed the way the author conveyed her love for nature and her Native roots. I particularly liked a couple passages in the first section, they were good food for thought, but afterwards, especially the second part of the book, the rest of poems felt kind of repetitive in concept and delivery.

  • Bill Yake<span class=

    This is the first of Linda Hogan's books I've read and I was impressed by her perspective: historical in its often aching acceptance of the awful treatment her people endured, her determination to heal wounds and offer clues to the medicine required for that healing, her empathy for fellow creatures, her combination of fierceness and kindness. I will explore her work further.

  • Karen Auvinen<span class=

    Just what we need now.

  • Joanna

    Brilliant. I highly recommend.

  • Keely

    “How we all want love,
    Even the waters,
    So let them be healthy and clean,
    Let us be carried
    Alive on the water of a planet,
    Along with it,
    Not just by it, but for it.”

  • Sarah<span class=

    Tender and teeming with life.

  • Sarah

    "...we are the river, sometimes weeping,
    sometimes laughing
    in this brief life
    And we can't help it but we love other waters,
    opening glorious into one another."

  • Kaitlyn

    Let me start this off by saying I think this book might just be beyond my level of intellect, and therefore I couldn’t entirely appreciate it for what it was. I want to read this again when I’m feeling more inspired by poetry and see if I can fully understand this collection and adjust my rating.

    That being said, I think it is good. The author is clearly talented and knows how to create lovely imagery. However, my mind kept wandering through the poems and some were so similar I wondered if I accidently went back a page or two without realizing it. I don’t think they’re similar in the message or topic, but in the words used for imagery. I also think this collection reads a lot like prose, which I can appreciate once in a while but it has a rhythm that isn’t my favorite.

    There’s nothing wrong with that, of course, that really just comes down to preference. I think most poetry lovers would actually read this collection and enjoy it a lot!

    Despite all that, there are plenty of poems in here that I found to be true gems that I adored very much:

    • What We Kept
    • The Names of Creeks
    • Distance Not Time
    • A History Of Kindness
    • Tulsa (top three)
    • The Bears Eating
    • Burying The Horse (my favorite)

  • Kaycee

    Beautiful poetry laced with the generational pain of colonization. I found myself super interested in the poetry, but less interested in the chapters where the author discusses the background of where the poems came from. I enjoy learning that when I know a lot about the author as a person, but as a first time reader, I wanted to gather my own perspective of the words being presented.

  • Mandy Hazen

    Beautiful poetry.