Slow War

Benjamin Hertwig

Image | BOOK COVER: Slow War by Hertwig, Benjamin

A century after the First World War, Benjamin Hertwig presents both the personal cost of war in poems such as Somewhere in Flanders/Afghanistan and Food Habits of Coyotes, as Determined by Examination of Stomach Contents, and the potential for healing in unlikely places in A Poem Is Not Guantánamo Bay. This collection provides no easy answers — Hertwig looks at the war in Afghanistan with the unflinching gaze of a soldier and the sustained attention of a poet. In his accounting of warfare and its difficult aftermath on the homefront, the personal becomes political.
While these poems inhabit both experimental and traditional forms, the breakdown of language channels a descent into violence and an ascent into a future that no longer feels certain, where history and trauma are forever intertwined. Hertwig reminds us that remembering war is a political act and that writing about war is a way we remember. (From McGill-Queen's University Press)

From the book

skunkmusk and alfalfa
drive-thru teenburgers
the long straight line
through fields and barbed wire fenceposts
grain elevators
swimming in clover
asphalt and glass under
the city's halogen halo.
homesmell up till midnight
finishing Harry Potter
and the Prisoner of Azkaban
sitting on your bed
wondering if you
will be afraid
when you see blood
and if you die
will you be saved
and the girls at school
will like you more
for having gone to war.

From Weekend Leave, Wainright to Edmonton by Benjamin Hertwig in the collection Slow War ©2017. Published by McGill-Queen's University Press.

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