Bookbot

Glory Hole

Auteurs

Évaluation du livre

Paramètres

  • 264pages
  • 10 heures de lecture

En savoir plus sur le livre

A ground-breaking new collection of queer poetry from a leading contemporary Korean poet. Kim Hyun's Glory Hole is the first Korean queer poetry collection. Featuring gay teens, elders, cats, caterpillars, robots and other unexpected characters, Kim's fifty-one eccentric poems trace themes of love, sexual desire, abandonment, destitution, and death. In recounting the splendid yet tragic journeys of his speakers, Kim defies meaningful sense-making. His poems are a mishmash of dystopian sci-fi and pornography, storytelling and poetry, fictive references and real figures. They are not embellished with elegant imagery; in fact, they are antithetical to it, opting instead for incoherent tense, unidiomatic expressions, and never-ending puns. After all, like LGBTQ+ people in many cultures, Korean queers live in this site of violence. Bewilderment, deliberately, is Kim Hyun's form. Glory Hole invites readers into a very queer world.

Achat du livre

Glory Hole, Kim Hyun

Langue
Année de publication
2022
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(souple)
Nous vous informerons par e-mail dès que nous l’aurons retrouvé.

Modes de paiement

3,8
Très bien
20 Évaluations

Il manque plus que ton avis ici.

Titre
Glory Hole
Langue
Anglais
Auteurs
Kim Hyun
Publié
2022
Format
souple
Pages
264
ISBN10
0857429876
ISBN13
9780857429872
Séries
Mots clés
Fiction, Poésie, LGBTQ+
Évaluation
3,8 sur 5
Description
A ground-breaking new collection of queer poetry from a leading contemporary Korean poet. Kim Hyun's Glory Hole is the first Korean queer poetry collection. Featuring gay teens, elders, cats, caterpillars, robots and other unexpected characters, Kim's fifty-one eccentric poems trace themes of love, sexual desire, abandonment, destitution, and death. In recounting the splendid yet tragic journeys of his speakers, Kim defies meaningful sense-making. His poems are a mishmash of dystopian sci-fi and pornography, storytelling and poetry, fictive references and real figures. They are not embellished with elegant imagery; in fact, they are antithetical to it, opting instead for incoherent tense, unidiomatic expressions, and never-ending puns. After all, like LGBTQ+ people in many cultures, Korean queers live in this site of violence. Bewilderment, deliberately, is Kim Hyun's form. Glory Hole invites readers into a very queer world.