Reviews

The Past by Wendy Xu

cardigans's review

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reflective relaxing

3.75

sumeyra's review

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5.0

i do recommend

kxiong5's review

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5.0

Things that this book does that I find really cool:
- toys with one's inability (personal and abstracted) to / the impossibility of find(ing) and believing in a settled narrative that isn't seeing *from* (but then also questioning what it means to see *from* anywhere if *from* is not a settled place / the see-er is not a settled person
- the constant turning + refusal to settle on a single direction or directional thought in general
- the impossibility of language as abstraction (but also the need for it -- not just in a personal sense but yes in a personal/emotional sense, and also in a political one)
- the convolutions & contradictions of what you want at any given point in time
- the way in which English is made to fit Chinese poetic form and vice versa (sonnets for Chinese?) and the intentional artificiality/impossibility thereof
- fuck the academy, we say from within the academy (fuck)
- the past as living, a world we need, a world that's ours, and yet somehow entirely separate from ours, one not beholden to us and our problems, one we warp into unrecognizable forms and try and fail and try and fail to understand
- the reality of the situation: people have died/are dying far away from these poems, but these poems are not somehow separate (and yet somehow are) -- the impossibility of a poem having place(s) in / changing the world just in its existence // the political reality of a poem
- the mapping/segmenting/crossings of space (military, political, surveillance, but also as landscape)
- these poems as solid moments: fragmentary in the jagged way of being/feeling lost, but also somehow whole
- overall: refusal to be defined but also refusal to define, going in circles, tracing a path--

robinks's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional reflective slow-paced

4.25

A lot of the beginning went over my head and was difficult to follow because the imagery and phrases are so abstract. I appreciated the intention of the Tiananmen Sonnets more than the execution. The last section was definitely the strongest to me, and I particularly resonated with Elegy for Soft Things and Notes for an Opening. The Notes at the end were also illuminating.

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isabella_acacia's review

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fast-paced

5.0

hmbk's review against another edition

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emotional reflective relaxing sad

3.75

cabeswaters's review

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I have mythologized it to the point of memory
Golf masters do this, alongside prisoners of war: intense visualization
over time seems to the body as good as lived experience
The imagination is an abstraction

librar_bee's review

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challenging emotional reflective medium-paced

4.5

faloodamooda's review

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challenging dark reflective slow-paced

5.0

Wendy Xu is a master of abstraction, which is why it will take another read to figure a lot of this book out
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