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Home > Book Review: 'Diwata' by Barbara Jane Reyes

Book Review: 'Diwata' by Barbara Jane Reyes

Submitted by hyphen-migration on Tue, 05/17/2011 - 4:29pm

In her third poetry collection, former Hyphen editor Barbara Jane Reyes moves backward in the Filipino diaspora timeline. Whereas her previous book, Poeta en San Francisco, addressed present-tense war and displacement from the viewpoint of fire escapes in San Francisco, Diwata returns to a Philippine archipelago caught in an eternal moment of myth. By turns invoking and speaking through diwatas (or fairies/spirits), mermaids and goddesses, Reyes' prose poems layer moments in Filipino colonial history upon mythical origin stories. A divine rape is mirrored in the book by a colonial rape; a siren later appears as the ocean embracing the bodies of murdered guerillas. The poems repeat motifs, story lines, even lyrics in a restless search for a new way to tell the story. And throughout, we hear the sounds of island life: the wind, the cracking of bamboo poles in dance, the chanting of villagers, the tattoo of gunfire. 


Magazine Section: 
Books [1]
Magazine Issue: 
Issue 23: Bittersweet - Spring 2011 [2]
Categories: 
Books [3]
Tags: 
poetry [4]
diwata [5]
barbara jane reyes [6]

Source URL:https://hyphenmagazine.com/magazine/issue-23-bittersweet-spring-2011/book-review-diwata-barbara-jane-reyes

Links
[1] https://hyphenmagazine.com/magazine/books [2] https://hyphenmagazine.com/magazine/issue-23-bittersweet-spring-2011 [3] https://hyphenmagazine.com/categories/books [4] https://hyphenmagazine.com/tags/poetry [5] https://hyphenmagazine.com/tags/diwata [6] https://hyphenmagazine.com/tags/barbara-jane-reyes