Crisis Chronicles Press
When You Don't Know Who You Are
When You Don't Know Who You Are
Couldn't load pickup availability
-M. L. Liebler, author of I Want to Be Once.
"In When You Don't Know Who You Are, Alinda Wasner takes on questions of identity and the meaning of family. These poems glow with clarity and a willingness to use imagination to uncover the truth. In "Faith," the narrator questions the Bible, the adoption story she's been told, and the myths of loss. In the title poem, Wasner shows the adopted adult as she experiments with alternative identities. Every casual contact wants to know her ethnicity, and it's painful because she doesn't know the answer. Yet the narrator has to admit not being tied to a single story leaves room to 'make things up.' It's this longing to know the truth and also to find 'a God / who can take two halves of a baby / and put them together again' that gives these poems their strength and makes reading them a pleasure."
-Dawn McDuffie, author of Bulky pick Up Day and Flag Day in Detroit
Share
