So Speak the Stars by Tawni Waters
Source: the publisher Paperback, 154 pgs. I am an Amazon Affiliate
So Speak the Stars by Tawni Waters, a collection of prose and poetry, is an exploration of the soul, a look at a soul struggling to love itself. This self-discovery journey travels from trailer parks to Paris and more internal worlds of faith, love, and self-confidence. Some of the poems exploring faith were meandering, like most journeys of faith can be, and often lost me on where they were going or what they wanted to say. But there are poem that read like confessions in personal journals and diaries. Some are incredibly raw and those are the poems that spoke the loudest about the pain of the journey and the sense of loss. Like in "AWOL Icon: A Love Song Without Music" (pg. 15), the narrator says, "Thunder breaks something and it's not just the sky."
From "Luster (Less)" (pg. 29)
Bad whiskey tastes sick sweet like forgetting and that's enough to make me suck it down.
Waters' daughter, Desiree Wade, illustrates a few panels of comic like prose poems and the images are just as jarring and heartbreaking as the poems themselves. This team has great potential if they work together again on a graphic novel or another poetry collection.
These poems are fierce, particularly "Labor Pains," which speaks about a mother's fierce love and need to protect her child from the world. It's beautiful and desperate and loss because as mothers we all know that our powers of protection are limited -- inside and outside of the womb.
So Speak the Stars by Tawni Waters looks to foster self-love and faith and explore those concepts through religious-like experiences as told through poems and illustration. There is a lot to digest in this collection, but it is a journey worth taking. You may learn something about yourself along the way.
RATING: Quatrain