Mountain light ascending dunes of skinFound desire’s battleground in ruins of skinDistance is both sea and vessel, wavingOur sorrow, boundless, spills in tunes of skinLove makes us outlaws in zealot’s eyesHounded in the streets by goons of skinFasting eons yield an Eid sightingTongues tasting slender moons of skinTo palm a poem is a breeze for NazGives a jot, out come fortunes of skin
Ghazal: Skin
Sophia Naz
Feature Date
- August 16, 2023
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“Ghazal: Skin” from BARK ARCHIPELAGO: by Sophia Naz.
Published by Weavers Press on March 30, 2023.
Copyright © 2023 by Sophia Naz.
All rights reserved.
Reproduced by Poetry Daily with permission.
Sophia Naz is a bilingual poet, artist, author, editor and translator. She has been nominated twice for the Pushcart Prize; in 2016 for creative nonfiction and in 2018 for poetry. Her work features in numerous literary journals and anthologies, including The Penguin Book of Modern Indian Poets, The Night Heron Barks, Singing in the Dark: A Global Anthology of Poetry Under Lockdown, Berfrois, The Bombay Literary Magazine, Rattle, The Punch Magazine, Poetry At Sangam, Poetry International Rotterdam, The Adirondack Review, The Wire, Chicago Quarterly Review, Blaze Vox, Scroll, The Daily O, Cafe Dissensus, RAIOT, Ideas And Futures, Chapati Mystery, Guftugu, Pratik, Gallerie International, Coldnoon, VAYAVYA, The Bangalore Review, Papercuts, Madras Courier, The Yearbook of Indian Poetry and many others.
She has authored the poetry collections; Peripheries (Cyberhex, 2015), Pointillism (Copper Coin, 2017), Date Palms (City Press, 2017), Open Zero (Yoda Press, 2021), and Shehnaz, a biography (Penguin Random House, 2019). Bark Archipelago is her fifth collection of poetry (Weavers Press, US & Red River India, 2023). She can be found online at www.sophianaz.com
“Reading these poems put me in the immediate mind of reading Harryette Mullen’s Muse and Drudge — these poems spin and spark, their language so playful and musical, filled with the energy of sound and motion. Lalla meets Eunice de Souza? An appropriate comparison. Combining the lush sensibility of the Urdu ghazal with the cosmopolitan epigrammatic crack of modern Indian English, Sophia Naz has written a masterful book.”
—Kazim Ali, author of Sukun: New and Selected Poems
“Sophia Naz’s Bark Archipelago hits startling and giddy, inventive and destroyful. Sinewy lines of chime and pun, misdirection and feint make to paint grotesques. Excess tangled in loss, thus ‘everything will kill you,’ even a lawn, even a length of fabric, even marriage. Naz pans slowly over the gory flensing of a whale and later breaks a human body into six members under twilight as gelatinous as blubber. This is a book of material, a broadside of extracted flesh and stone. Things. And the people who are made them. Material: the poet’s language itself should fill your mouth before you spill it into air like ‘windborne plastic bags’; till the thought-bubbles come, ‘taking up all the oxygen.’ Yes: Bark Archipelago is breathless, racing to the line break before autocorrect can aggress or we wheel and deal the globe to our end.”
—Douglas Kearney, author of Sho
“These mercurial poems—Sphinx-like, ‘s/addled’ with the responsibility of a world in delirium — call in linkages and playful techniques that ‘rite, ignite’ their way into renewal. Something ‘rubs’ free in the space between languages and moves past the amnion to drop into an ‘unborn sea.’ Pay attention.”
—Monica Mody, author of Kala Pani
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