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Cheryl Savageau
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Cheryl Savageau

Mother/Land

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Biographical note:  Abenaki poet, Cheryl Savageau has been awarded Fellowships in Poetry from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Massachusetts Artists Foundation, and three residencies at the MacDowell Colony. Her second book of poetry, Dirt Road Home, was a finalist for the Paterson Poetry Prize. She was awarded Mentor of the Year by Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers, as well as Writer of the Year for her children’s book, Muskrat Will Be Swimming. Savageau also works as a textile artist. Her quilts have recently been exhibited at the University of New Hampshire in Durham.

 

BIC Basic

EAN13:  9781844712694
ISBN-10:  1844712699
ISBN-13:  9781844712694
Author:  Cheryl Savageau
Title:  Mother/Land
Series:  Earthworks
Product class:  BC
Language:  eng
Audience:  General/trade
BIC subject category:  CTCH1
Publisher:  Salt Publishing
Pub date:  01-Sep-06
Extent:  156pp
Height:  216 mm
Width:  140 mm
Thickness:  9 mm
Weight:  234 gms
Supplier:   Gardners Books
Supplier:   Ingram Book Group
Supplier:   Inbooks (James Bennett)
Availability:  IP
Price:  GBP 10.99
Price:  USD 16.95
Rights:  World

 

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spacer Short description/annotation:  In Mother/Land, Savageau weaves traditional, personal and family stories, with stories of colonization and resistance, revealing a landscape of trees, ponds, rivers and mountains rich in meaning for Abenaki people. Mother/Land is beaded with gems from her mother’s jewel box—poems that tell stories of her mother’s life and death, and the complexities of love and survival.

 

Main description:  In Cheryl Savageau’s new book of poetry, Mother/Land, she radically re-maps New England as Native American space. Savageau retells and re-imagines creation stories, revealing a landscape of trees, ponds, rivers and mountains rich in meaning for Abenaki people, and weaves traditional, personal and family stories, with stories of colonization and resistance. Savageau’s “unhistory” tells the stories of her people without privileging the moment of contact with Europe as the defining moment for viewing the culture.

Mother/Land is beaded with gems from her mother’s jewel box—poems that tell stories of her mother’s life, and the complexities of survival and love in a family of mixed heritage.

Savageau’s work signals the reemergence of a people who have been described as “hiding in plain sight.” In contrast to stereotypical associations of Native Americans with “Mother Earth,” this poetry highlights the bittersweet complexities of the relationship between a woman and her homeland, whose bodies seem to be constantly under siege.

 

Table of contents:
MOTHER/LAND
First Diamond
Amber Necklace
Turtle
The Moon’s Other Face
First Woman
Opals
Game Bag
Ant Tree
Emerald
Hair
The Willow at Flint Pond
At Sugarloaf
Fertility Figure
Twentieth Anniversary Diamond
Algonkian Paradise
Race Point, Provincetown
Grand Banks
Pies
Bread
Where I Want Them
Swift River
Red
GHOSTS AT THE CENTER OF THE WORLD
Garnet
Hummingbird Moth
Cod
Everywhere
Before Moving on to Plymouth from Cape Cod – 1620
Grandmother Woodchuck Talks to the Women of Salem
Englishmen’s Footprints
Newfoundland Walking With Joseph Brant
Daughter’s of the King
Mendel’s Milkmen
Pink Sapphire
The Kneeling Girl
Mexican Amethyst
My Mother’s Pearl Cuffs
Nesting
No Pity
Beauty Tip
Surrogate Mother
For Lenny, For Lisa
The Liar
Aftermath
Rose Quartz Necklace
Tradition
Ring of Protection
Poison in the Pond
Smallpox
Indian Blood
Graduate School First Semester
Chandelier
Crayons
Pink Ice with Marcasite
Pemigewasset
VISITING THE LAND OF THE DEAD
North Country: Visiting the Land of the Dead
Entangled
Morning: UMass Medical Center
Hurricane – North Truro
Side Pass
Night Sky
Rosary
Grandmother Woodchuck As St. Ann
Jewel Box
DressingUp
Piano Dream
Purple Ice
Figure Eight
Like A Good Death
INTO GREEN
Peridot
Blue House
For the Boy Standing Under the Drainpipe
Waiting for Feathers
Convent School
Underage
Onyx Necklace With Pearls
You Bring Out the Butch In Me
Marinade
Deep Winter
Wedding in A Burning Building
Into Green
Summer Language Lesson
How to Get There
Gamebag Dream
Aquamarine
Heart
Grandmother Knits

 

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Unpublished endorsement :  Mother/Land is restoring the world through the retelling of patterns passed woman to woman like songs to lips. In this familial place, where one haggles over Memere’s house dress, combs her Mama’s hair as if brushing a bird’s wing, employs mother-of-pearl to fill the black hole of her absence leaving buxom hills bare of trees. From this childhood where one might wear a dress of fall grass, cut ankles on witchgrass, and peer into a refrigerator to delineate a hummingbird from a moth; in the land of mothers, grandmothers, and their later lineal offspring, we come to terms with crossroads and swallows, rivers and oceans, and they lead us back home from which we began—the Motherland.

Allison Hedge Coke

 

Unpublished endorsement :  Cheryl Savageau stares into stones of amber, opal, emerald, garnet, sapphire, amethyst, pearl, quartz, peridot, and onyx,recording every change of light and color they throw on old and new loves. She examines recurring characters and places from as many angled refractions as possible until one of the richest, fullest New England spiritual topographies ever written emerges. Readers who know Savageau’s earlier chronicling of those who sacralize and profane her homescape will be astonished at this poetic culmination of fully-drawn portraits. I fell, hard, for the boy under the drain pipe, the whale’s word for world, the slapping tails of children, the hummingbird in the refrigerator, the cathechist with knife in her teeth, the wife spraying breast milk at the breakfast table, the woodchuck too busy for crucifixions, the piano baptized in molasses, the parakeet’s family jewels, the leathered and lathered Doc Martened butch leading her woman around the dance floor, the lightning that converses with fireflies, and everyone, everything that busts out of the gamebag and into Cheryl Savageau’s poetry. This may be one of the best literary depictions of New England to date, certainly the finest one to challenge whatever is new and English about the place.

Craig S. Womack

 

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