Plenitude

Daniel Sarah Karasik

Image | BOOK COVER: Plenitude by Daniel Sarah Karasik

(Book*Hug Press)

A non-binary faun wishes their body had a variety of sex organs, interchangeable daily. A prison abolitionist scrutinizes Rothko paintings on the carceral state's boardroom walls. The insurrectionary tactics of mass social movements spread, like a secret handshake, from Chile to Hong Kong to Toronto.
Shaped by Daniel Sarah Karasik's experience of grassroots social and political advocacy, these poems are an offering to those engaged in struggles for a better world—and an acknowledgement of the sometimes contradictory meanings of those struggles. How do individual erotic desires relate to collective desires for deliverance from alienation and exploitation? How might we dream of a more humane future, and work towards building it, without minimizing the challenges that stand in our way?
Plenitude cartwheels towards a world that might be: a world without cops or bosses, without prisons, without oppressive regulation of gender and desire. It is a song for the excluded and forgotten and those who struggle alongside them. (From Book*Hug Press)
Daniel Sarah Karasik is a writer, playwright and poet from Toronto. They are the author of five books of drama, poetry and fiction.
Karasik won the 2012 CBC Short Story Prize.

Interviews with Daniel Sarah Karasik

Media Audio | CBC Books : Daniel Sarah Karasik talks to Gloria Macarenko about Canadian LGBTQ+ literature for Pride Month

Caption: Daniel Sarah Karasik spoke to Gloria Macarenko on CBC Radio’s On the Coast about the inspiration behind their newest poetry collection, being a LGBTQ+ writer in Canada and LGBTQ+ representation in Canadian Literature.

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