Burrow Press
A Sinking Ship is Still a Ship
A Sinking Ship is Still a Ship
In Ariel Francisco's Miami, invasive lionfish are sympathetic creatures, the beach succumbs to sea-level rise, and "305 till I die" is a cry for help. The speakers in these hilarious and melancholy poems depict a rich and varied emotional landscape that mirrors that of the state they long to leave, dead or alive. They imagine themselves standing on ocean garbage patches, contemplate the crabgrass on traffic medians, and envision the new beauty of a submerged Miami Beach: "Famed art deco replaced by fire coral / and colorful parrot fish, neon lights / restored by pulsating swarms of moon / jellyfish, lit up like a Saturday night." In one moment the strange becomes familiar, only to become strange again in the next stanza. Taking inspiration from Campbell McGrath and Richard Blanco, among others, Ariel Francisco's second book of poems deals with climate change and the absurdities and difficulties of being a millenial Latinx in the Sunshine State.
Author: Ariel Francisco
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Burrow Press
Published: 01/01/2021
Pages: 146
Weight: 0.49lbs
Size: 9.02h x 5.98w x 0.34d
ISBN: 9781941681510
Bilingual Edition