| Well known by readers
of gay and lesbian fiction for her award-winning short story collections
and novels; notorious in the legal profession as the nation's
"foremost authority on lesbians and law" (Village Voice),
a professor at the City University of New York, a young mother
raising a son, Ruthann Robson's breadth of experience is unique
among American poets. With seamless use of poetic craft and ironic
wit, Robson tackles subjects as political as they are bizarre:
the young woman chained to a radiator by her mother to keep her
safe from harm; the teenager who gets herself knocked up because
it's less dangerous to be an unwed mother than a lesbian. Affecting,
terrifying, but always bathed in a clear hard light, these poems
introduce a stunning intelligence and a bold new voice in American
poetry.
"Ardent, passionate, and exquisitely queer…Robson's
sense of playfulness is wonderful …The poems in Masks are
startling not only for their quirky, often whimsical, humanity,
but also for their imaginative use of form… There is history
in this book. Witch burnings. Concentration camps. Poverty. Robson
covers terrifying, white hot terrain with unflinching honesty
and a poet's heart… She takes the magnifying glass of poetic
language and investigates detail by detail every aspect of the
female condition."
— Lambda Book Report
"Another excellent book of poetry from 1999, Masks reveals
how time and the moment of vision drive the poet to turn upon
experience and make language out of it. These impressive poems
swallow any distance between maker and reader as they pass from
the glories of relationships to the price of loss. Some of Robson's
best work is poems about famous women such as Frida Kahlo, Alice
B. Toklas, Diane Arbus and Isadora Duncan. This is a truly marvelous
collection that haunts the reader and never diminishes the art
of the poem."
— Bloomsbury Review
"Robson gives you more than you bargained for...Her first
collection of poetry is terse yet throbbing, filled with the raw,
aggressive energy of someone who can't be bothered with niceties...there
is definite craft here: these lines aren't just thrown out but
clearly thought and rethought:"you spend your days modelling
mask/ after mask," says Robson, who must spend her days modelling
poem after poem."
— Library Journal
"Here are poems on the brink of a new history we are making
at the border between the 20th and 21st century. These poems are
erudite and stand tall. They ask questions and are not afraid
to listen. We learn from them: how to recognize ourselves without
our masks, how to value the history of mask-making."
— Joy Harjo
"As no autobiography or biography that I've read, Ruthann
Robson's poems link without a shred of sentimentality, but with
great compassion, the lives of women forced to fight for daily
survival and for artistic creation. Personal genealogy and history
merge to form a collective consciousness that seeps through each
poem. Masks has immediacy, resonates with hard-won wisdom and,
like all great poetry, changes the way we see ourselves and the
society which tries to shape and frame us."
— Irena Klepfisz, author of A Few Words in the Mother
Tongue
About the Author:
Ruthann Robson's short story collection Eye of a Hurricane was
the winner of the Ferro-Grumley Award for Outstanding Fiction.
Her latest novel A/K/A (St. Martin's) was nominated for the Lambda
Award. Sappho Goes To Law School was published by the Columbia
University Press. The Struggle for Happiness (St. Martin's) is
her newest collection of short fiction.
POETRY
$14.00 Paperback Original
ISBN: 0-9654578-5-0
160 Pages / 6 x 9
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