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Patrick Rosal

Author of My American Kundiman

6+ Works 122 Members 1 Review

About the Author

Patrick Rosal is the author of three previous collections of poetry, which have been honored with the Association of Asian American Studies Book Award, Global Filipino Literary Award, and the Asian American Writers Workshop Member's Choice Award. He teaches in the creative writing program at show more Rutgers-Camden and lives in Philadelphia. show less
Image credit: reading at the National Book Festival, Washington, D.C. By slowking4 - Own work, GFDL 1.2, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=72267081

Works by Patrick Rosal

My American Kundiman (2006) 33 copies
Boneshepherds: Poems (2011) 22 copies, 1 review
Atang 1 copy

Associated Works

The BreakBeat Poets: New American Poetry in the Age of Hip-Hop (2015) — Contributor — 207 copies, 2 reviews
The Best American Poetry 2016 (2016) — Contributor — 120 copies, 4 reviews
We Wear the Mask: 15 True Stories of Passing in America (2017) — Contributor — 92 copies, 23 reviews
The Best American Poetry 2014 (The Best American Poetry series) (2014) — Contributor — 89 copies, 1 review
The Spoken Word Revolution Redux (2007) — Contributor — 86 copies, 3 reviews
The Best American Poetry 2022 (2022) — Contributor — 66 copies, 1 review
Ghost Fishing: An Eco-Justice Poetry Anthology (2018) — Contributor — 13 copies

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Members

Reviews

1 review
The poetry of the American poet of Filipino origin, Patrick Rosal is original and daring. In Boneshepherds. Poems he explores themes of violence and pain. In many of the poems, Rosal looks back to life in his hometown in the Philippines, evoking the fields surrounding the village, while making connections to the more hectic, and dangerous life of crime and violence in his new home, the United States.

Many of the poems in this collection are written in free verse, but retain a natural rhythm show more and cadence, which helps the reader propel through the poems. The images of anger and pain, are often contrasted with images of beauty from the natural world. About half of the poems approach a prose-like style, narrating as much as evoking images chosen by the author.

While many poems are based on a type of street-kid wisdom, other poems are infused with a religious sense, echoing the cruelty of some stories in the Bible, as, for instance, the crucifixion, in the poem "Man Hanging Upside Down".

Here is a man hanging upside down
from a makeshift cross.

No credible witness can seem to tell us
his name or where he comes from.

Let the record show,
he did lie in at least seven dozen bits,

until the local birds plucked his scraps
from the river. They carried first an elbow,

then a toe, then half a skull and so on,
piecing the body together again

incorrectly: left arm for right,
an eye for a thumb, a moonlight for knees,

until he hung again from the cross
he was nailed to in the first place

at the intersection of Jordan and Faith,
and truth be told, few of us notice

how often those ragtag blackbirds
have come to squawk at every wondow in town.

Who is to say if this man hanging upside down
was corrupt or loved, only that some birds

set themselves in the middle of the night
to the aerial miracle of silt made flesh

a crew of winged scoundrels, some half-mute, half-blind,
that plucked a body's remnants from muddy banks

and at the crossroads of Faith and Truth Be Told
reassembled the figure of a man

who must surely ache, the way he strains to turn
his gaze away from so many nations at once.
show less
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Statistics

Works
6
Also by
7
Members
122
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Rating
4.0
Reviews
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ISBNs
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