In his new collection, poet Ariel Dorfman explores death, grief and redemption, hoping that “the light I have invented, the words with which we have all been blessed, will sweeten the death that fast approaches for me.” The famed writer, academic and activist writes about intimate family matters and revisits recurring themes in his work, including war, social justice and climate change.
In a series of poems written from the perspective of deceased historical figures to contemporary politicians and soldiers, he warns about the need for reckoning and atonement. In one, Pablo Picasso speaks to Colin Powell, asking why his famous painting depicting the horror of war, Guernica, was covered when the secretary of state spoke about the invasion of Iraq at the United Nations. “Were you afraid that the mother / would leap from her image and say / no he is the one / they are the ones who will bomb / from afar / they are the ones who will kill / the child.” In another, Salvador Allende encourages Barack Obama to fight for his beliefs, “So that when you arrive on these shores / and look back as I do, you will have no regrets.”
Others explore connections to loved ones, including “the love of my life, Angélica, the woman who helped me survive exile and tribulations and peopled my world with hope.” He writes about the passionate love the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan felt for his wife, which led to the construction of the Taj Mahal, and imagines conversations between William Shakespeare and Miguel de Cervantes, who died within hours of each other. Neither escaped the iron rule of mortality: “The story of our own death is the one experience we are unable to transmit to anybody else.” Though written by an internationally acclaimed intellectual, these incredibly moving poems share the most human of emotions and expose Dorfman’s vulnerability as he embarks on the last leg of his journey.
- Cover
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Table of Contents
- Prologue: Remembering How I Stood in Front of the
Statue of Notre Dame De La Consolation at the
Église St. Germain-des-Prés
- One: Some Sort of Meeting
- Pablo Picasso Has Words for Colin Powell from
the Other Side of Death
- Christopher Columbus Has Words from the Other Side
of Death for Captain John Whyte, Who Rebaptized
Saddam International Airport as His Troops Rolled into It
- Hammurabi, the Exalted Prince Who Made Great the
Name of Babylon, Has Words from the Other Side of
Death for Donald Rumsfeld
- William Blake Has Words from the Other Side of Death
for Laura Bush, Lover of Literature
- Salvador Allende Has Words for Barack Obama from
the Other Side of Death
- James Buchanan, the 15th President of the United States,
Has Words of Encouragement from the Other Side of
Death for Donald J. Trump Just Before His Inauguration in
January 2017
- Dante Alighieri Has Words from the Other Side of Death
for Donald J. Trump as His Presidency Ends
- Two: Dust in Love
- Mumtaz
- Ashes to Ashes
- Is There a Place Your Lips Go?
- Long Forgotten
- Glitch
- Ten Minutes
- Waving Good-Bye
- Elegy for the Plants as They Are Harvested and Eaten
- Shakespeare and Cervantes Write to Each Other on the
Occasion of the Four Hundred Years of Their Simultaneous
Disappearance from This World
- A Question for Shakespeare and Cervantes
- Three: A Grain of Wheat in the Silence
- Reprieve
- For Sarajevo, After a Thousand and One Nights of Siege
- Farewell and Dawn
- Poem for the Grandchildren of Three Five 0[sub(2)]
- Anything Else Would Have Tasted Like Ashes
- Last Will and Testament
- A Sort of Epilogue with Help from Francisco De Quevedo
- Requiem for Some Cenizas
- Some Words of Thanks and Gracias from This Side of Death