<p>&ldquo;Maram al-Massri comes as a shock. She writes about all the taboo subjects&mdash;physical passion faithlessness adultery loneliness despair&mdash;with candor and intensity that would mark her out even to Westerners.&rdquo;&mdash;<I>The Times</I> (London)</p><p>&ldquo;Her direct unadorned writing with its emphasis on the quotidian and utilization of simple almost child-like metaphors contrast sharply with the conventions of traditional Arabic love poetry.&rdquo;&mdash;<I>Banipal: Magazine of Modern Arab Literature</I></p><p><BR> The spare emotive verse of <I>A Red Cherry on a White-tiled Floor</I> reflects definite bravery on the part of Syrian poet Maram Al-Massri.<BR> &mdash;<I>ForeWord</I></p><p>Sexy mischievous and utterly delightful (al-Massri's) poems are epigrammatic seductively clever and at their best unforgettable.&mdash;<I>San Diego Union-Tribune</I></p><p>Short vivid frankly erotic and remarkable for their emotional intelligence Syrian poet Al-Massri's poems are as startling in English as they must have been to their first Arabic readers. &mdash;<I>Publishers Weekly</I></p><p>Syrian poet Maram al-Massri writes of love and the place of women in the modern age with striking candor and intensity. &ldquo;I am this mix between the submissive and rebellious woman&rdquo; she writes &ldquo;my freedom is so difficult and so desired.&rdquo; Her poems invoke a world where women are trapped and men flow freely of the intoxicating power of seduction and the intensity of lust of the security of relationships and muffled explosions of emotion.</p><p><I>Like grains of salt</I><br> <I>they shone</I><br> <I>then melted.</I><br> <I>This is how they disappeared</I><br> <I>those men</I><br> <I>who did not love me.</I></p><p>Al-Massri herself straddles racial religious and cultural worlds. Born in Latakia Syria she moved to Paris in 1984 and has since refused to return: &ldquo;I divorced from my past my religion my land and even from my language.&rdquo; Despite being fluent in French and English she writes in Arabic following traditional forms.</p><p><I>A Red Cherry on a White-tiled Floor</I> is al-Massri's first book published in the United States and appears in a bilingual Arabic-English edition.</p>
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