Reviews

The Country Between Us by Carolyn Forché

booksmellers's review

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challenging dark sad fast-paced

4.5

seebrandyread's review

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adventurous challenging dark emotional informative reflective sad slow-paced

4.5

Carolyn Forché describes her own collection, The Country Between Us, as "poetry of witness." The first section of the book is dedicated to her time in El Salvador during the country's 12-year civil war as a journalist and human rights advocate, and the other two combine experiences from her other travels and the people she encounters along the way.

As the title suggests, these poems are preoccupied by space and different forms of separation. Space can be vast like a continent or country or as narrow as a jail cell or the human body. No space is too large or too small to contain tragedy or grace. Spaces hold the potential to contain or exclude, to be vessels of safety or entrapment.

The first section includes political figures and other people and activists Forché met or knew of in El Salvador. The second section follows her travels to other parts of the world and in America and the people she meets and observes there. She "witnesses" these lives of others, lives big and small, past and present. Some of them may have no other memorial than Forché's words.

Time is another version of space in these poems, another form of joining or separating. Time passing can wipe away memory or deepen a sense of myth or legend. This collection was published in 1981, now 40 years ago, and some of its poems were written even earlier or are at least dated in the 60s. Forché calls equally on the past and future, knowing that how she feels about the past is the same as how future her will feel about the present, leaving a tone of repetition and inevitability in her poems.

Beauty and horror appear side by side in Forché's portrayals of war, genocide, and other ubiquitous atrocities. While I don't think I could characterize the book as hopeful, it at least points toward the necessity for fighting--for survival, for art, for brief but sustaining moments of connection.

losethegirl's review

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dark emotional hopeful reflective medium-paced

5.0

This book is going on my list of all time favourites. I kept reading and rereading pages over and over again, I'm left aching for more of this book. Particular favourites were "The Visitor", "Because One is Always Forgotten", and "Joseph". I'd highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys poetry that interlocks violence and love, or anyone who's Eastern European living outside of Eastern Europe. It captured so many of my feelings about being unable to go back to somewhere I've always thought of as home, and so many of my feelings about love in general. 

divineauthor's review

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emotional reflective fast-paced

3.75

help girl i’m going thru it :') honestly would’ve been a four but perhaps it’s me but my attention Wavered

pturnbull's review

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5.0

Amazing, forceful poetry, this book defines a poetry of witness. There are pure, hard-wrought words of experience that describe late twentieth century political violence in El Salvador. This is a cry from the soul--this is witness, beautifully constructed, devastatingly felt. A must-read.

arnie's review

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5.0

Some really powerful poetry. Most reviews praise her poetry of the horrors of El Salvador, but I think equally powerful are the poems in the 2nd half of the book, many of them taking place on trains and of alienation. However, the El Salvador poems are hard to forget. I particularly like the ending of Return:
Your problem is not your life as it is
in America, not that your hands, as you
tell me, are tied to do something. It is
that you were born to an island of greed
and grace where you have this sense
of yourself as apart from others. It is
not your right to feel powerless. Better
people than you were powerless.
You have not returned to your country,
but to a life you never left.

bzzbzzbooks's review

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fast-paced

5.0

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