Fady Joudah
Author of ...: Poems
About the Author
Image credit: Luigi Novi
Works by Fady Joudah
Sunbird 1 copy
Associated Works
Buzz Words: Poems About Insects (Everyman's Library Pocket Poets Series) (2021) — Contributor — 56 copies
Inclined to Speak: An Anthology of Contemporary Arab American Poetry (2008) — Contributor — 25 copies
Firsts: 100 Years of Yale Younger Poets (Yale Series of Younger Poets) (2019) — Contributor — 15 copies
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Fady Joudah is a Palestinian-American poet, whose collection, [The Earth in the Attic], won the Yale Series of Younger Poets competition. A practicing emergency room physician and member of Doctors without Borders, Joudah has also translated the poetry of the Palestinian poets, Mahmoud Darwish and Ghassam Zaqtan. Although Joudah was born and lives in the United States, he was raised in the Middle East, his parents being Palestinian refugees. There is clarity to Joudah’s imagery and show more uniqueness in the way it integrates disparate worlds - being both American and from a family of Palestinian refugees, and a practitioner of medicine both in Houston and in poverty-stricken African countries.
“Sleeping Trees” is based on accompanying his father on a visit to his home village and is representative of how his poetry reflects the experience of the returning exile.
I found Joudah to be at his best when merging his experience as a physician with his humanitarian concerns. My favorite in this collection is “Pulse”, a poem delivered in 15 sections. In her introduction, Louise Gluck notes the likelihood that it is set in Darfur, where Joudah served with Doctors Without Borders. .
“Sleeping Trees” is based on accompanying his father on a visit to his home village and is representative of how his poetry reflects the experience of the returning exile.
….My father
Learned to fly in a dream. This is the story
Of a sycamore tree he used to climb
When he was young to watch the rain.
Sometimes it rained so hard it hurt. Like being
Beaten with sticks. Then the mud would run red.
My brother believed bad dreams could kill
A man in his sleep, he insisted
We wake my father from his muffled screams
On the night of the day he took us to see his village.
No longer his village he found his tree amputated. (3-13)
I found Joudah to be at his best when merging his experience as a physician with his humanitarian concerns. My favorite in this collection is “Pulse”, a poem delivered in 15 sections. In her introduction, Louise Gluck notes the likelihood that it is set in Darfur, where Joudah served with Doctors Without Borders. .
Halimah’s mother did not seem aware Halimah was dying.show less
You should have seen Halimah fight her airlessness
Twisting around for a comfortable spot in the world.
………………………….
…Halimah
Died of a failing heart
Early this dawn, her mother, with tears now,
Was on the road, twenty steps past me
Before I turned and found her waiting.
We walked back toward each other, we met, we
Read verses from the Quran,
Our palms open,
Elbows upright like surgeons
Ready to gown up after scrubbing, the slap
Of rubber gloves before we went our separate ways. (“Pulse 12”, 1-3, 9-19)
This is an interesting and very thoughtful collection of poems on Palestine being Palestinian-American. The author's life as a doctor is clear, as is the fact that he practices in the US (Houston) and is American (born in Texas to refugee parents). Many of the poems have no names, or are just [...] the same as the title of the book. He is clearly deeply affected by the ongoing war on/attack on Palestine and Palestinian territories, but he is also far removed and knows and feels that.
This show more author is a doctor, a translator, a husband and father, and an award-winning poet. This is amazing to me. show less
This show more author is a doctor, a translator, a husband and father, and an award-winning poet. This is amazing to me. show less
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