小蓝视频

Skip to content

Book Review: Patrycja Humienik鈥檚 powerful debut poetry collection is a conundrum worth mulling over

Sometimes reading poetry can feel exhilarating, like you are finally seeing and being seen. Other times it鈥檚 a slog that leaves you desperate for a nap to process what you just read.
351297f700d501e8c5a4e924b97d680c6146f0fc572d1d953006913973460dc8
This cover image released by Tin House Books shows "We Contain Landscapes" by Patrycja Humienik. (Tin House via AP)

Sometimes reading poetry can feel exhilarating, like you are finally seeing and being seen. Other times it鈥檚 a slog that leaves you desperate for a nap to process what you just read. Patrycja Humienik鈥檚 debut poetry collection, 鈥淲e Contain Landscapes,鈥 is a healthy mix of both.

A self-described queer immigrant, Humienik considers questions of chronic illness and inheritance, of a daughter鈥檚 duty and an immigrant鈥檚 place in the world.

The poems make use of the canon鈥檚 go-to imagery 鈥 rivers, seas, flowers 鈥 while exploring new territory in spiral staircases and 鈥渦n-ribboning.鈥 There鈥檚 a sensual, ephemeral, dream-like quality to the collection, woven in with lines like, 鈥淒o to me what sunlight does to a river.鈥 They demand extra time to imagine and deserve a moment to bask in.

Deep veins of nature running throughout cause a jarring contrast with modern happenings 鈥 one moment light filters through leaves and the next we鈥檙e scrolling Instagram. Juxtaposition is the name of the game in 鈥淲e Contain Landscapes.鈥

In 鈥淪alt of the Earth,鈥 Humienik collocates going to see family in Poland with her experience growing up an immigrant in America. In the United States, her immigrant status is a mark of shame from which she can stay hidden, 鈥淪hielded by whiteness,/assumed to be documented.鈥 Yet when she visits her family in Poland, she is ashamed to be called American 鈥 sentiments of rootlessness that echo among first- and second-generation immigrants the world over.

Valleys meet mountains, enjambment breaks up thoughts. One poem is a single, two-page-long run-on sentence. Another is one short stanza containing a series of questions, a collaborative poem that takes meaning only when the reader pauses to answer each one, forming a conversation. 鈥淪orry For Taking鈥 is a panic attack-infused series of missed calls and bad phone connections allegorical to unheeded warning signs of a warming climate.

小蓝视频ions are sometimes buried in clever wordplay, and linguistics make layers of meaning. In the context of a river unfazed by changing maps and borders, 鈥渢he past disrupts the current.鈥

Then there's 鈥淲e,鈥 a poem that eschews any one logical form and flows like a river, crossing paths with itself so that chunks of it make sense to read horizontally or vertically depending on which trickle of thought you want to follow.

Throughout the collection, poems provide context that enriches other entries, so that by the time you reach the end you could start over and have a new experience altogether.

Humienik鈥檚 is a powerful debut, a conundrum as rich and arresting as it is sorrowful and celebratory and nuanced.

___

AP book reviews:

Donna Edwards, The Associated Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks