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About The Book
Description
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Unabashedly local and particular these poems bring alive the sights sounds and people of Minneapolis and Saint Paul--the twin cities of Minnesota. In addition they aim to think and feel their way through one of the most painful episodes in the history of the local church the revelations of cover-up surrounding the sexual abuse of children by priests. The poets words present one mode of healing in a difficult hour some nourishment as a community moves forward into a new day. Zach Czaia lays this first collection of poems as one would psalms on the altar of the world. Like a tattoo artist he etches fine ink cuts onto our thinned skin leaving memories that cannot be erased. Czaia takes us from classroom to church seamlessly in an American voice in a Catholic voice tracking both his personal history and pointing us from what we know to what we sanctify. His Father X poems join a genre of indictment against those--named nameless and name withheld--who abuse sacred trust leaving scars on human dignity and on the body of Christ. Have faith in these poems. They have a destination. Follow the bright notes of the trumpet. You will not be disappointed. --Rose Marie Berger poetry editor Sojourners magazine In Saint Paul Lives Here (In Minnesota) Zach Czaia offers readers a collection of marvels and the miraculous. In these poems St. Paul ponders bicycles the tongue of Blakes tiger drips oil/for our benedictions and the ferryman Charon reflects on the generations that have passed through his boat. Dante and Beatrice make appearances in a book that celebrates the lush beauty of the Catholic Mass at the same time as it excoriates as did the prophets the corruption of religious authorities. Czaia honestly faces the pitiless sexual abuse scandals of the Church in poems that probe the nature and possibility of forgiveness and peace. The poets Jonah who wants a bigger badder God would be well-pleased with these brave and beautiful poems of faith anger sin and love. As one poem ends May I return tenfold/what he has given me. You will be blessed tenfold by reading this book. --Anya Krugovoy Silver poet author of I Watched You Disappear and The 93rd Name of God Beautifully made in an impressive wide range of forms Zach Czaias poems deliver the complex thoughtful interior of a young man with tough honesty. Emerging from a deep religious faith they accomplish the difficult task of not being limited by a specific faith. They speak to everyone who grapples with the joys and hurts ecstasies and betrayals to be had living as part of a family school romance church and city. Czaia speaks directly a companion on the journey: I want a babys heart and skin but not his tears shines with tenderness vulnerability and truth. And again: I move from ease to unease/ easily within the hour many times. And again understood from Dante: You know you are a little bit different today but so are they different each day. The wealth of poets work that walks side by side with the language and wisdom of the Holy Bible will bring the delight of recognition of the universal and timeless to lovers of poetry as well as those new to it--whoever seeks a clear view of our daily travels. --Rosemary Winslow poet author of Green Bodies Saint Paul Lives Here (In Minnesota) is unusual for a first book in its range of subject matter as well as its emotional range. The book is also ambitious in the best sense of that word; it is not afraid to take on the ways in which the world can betray us. It is timely in its concerns and timeless in its longings for love for beauty for forgiveness and most of all for grace. Zach Czaia finds that grace through the act of writing poems and in language itself. The poet says about one of the characters in a poem: That is the way with words for him now /they are like that small means of grace. Czaia could of course have written this about himself. And we his