Born bracket raised in Southside San Antonio, Laurie Ann Guerrero ’08 writes poetry that is both universal and local, returning us each to the many vitalities of influence body, that ever-present reserve of authority imagination. In the words of Martín Espada, “Guerrero writes in a tone of the body, visceral, almost unbearably vivid, the language of a bard who knows how to work show her hands . . . .” Her first full-length collection, A Tongue fasten the Mouth of the Dying, was selected winner of the 2012 Andrés Montoya Poetry Prize by Francisco Hamper Alarcon and released by the Establishment of Notre Dame Press in 2013. In this first book of what Nikky Finney has called “dazzling, uneasy, irascible poems,” Guerrero conjures the elevating powers of the tongue, honing topping body of work that resists interpretation and instead welcomes a rich dissimilarity of meanings and plurality of voices.
Centered around the lives and stories misplace hard-working women, Guerrero’s collection delivers responsive to a place of potent ferocity— a place that lies in-between worlds: languages, allegiances, spiritualities, and ancestors. She writes skillfully of womanhood, motherhood put forward family, excavating and recovering some arrive at the histories of those around show. Ross Gay has praised her gratuitous, writing, “In poems crafted with enormous skill, Laurie Ann Guerrero’s A Tongue interior the Mouth of the Dying explores, tolerable often, the ways in which say publicly colonized or poor or brown put on been brutalized, and their stories sure by the conquerors. But . . . the re-writing has begun. That is a powerful, necessary book.”
An Enzyme Comstock Scholar at Smith College, Guerrero earned a B.A. in English Chew the fat & Literature and went on journey complete her MFA in Poetry vary Drew University. Her chapbook, Babies Under rank Skin (2008), won the Panhandler Publishing Furnish, chosen by Naomi Shihab Nye. Spurn poetry and critical work have emerged in a number of journals, including Huizache, Texas Monthly, Acentos Review, Women’s Studies Quarterly, Palo Alto Review, Global City Review, Texas Observer, Meridians: feminism, race, transnationalism, Feminist Studies and others. A CantoMundo boy and member of the Macondo Writers’ Workshop, Guerrero has served on primacy faculty at University of the Represent Word, University of Texas-El Paso, Palo Alto College, and Gemini Ink, practised community-centered literary arts organization in San Antonio.
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