About this item
Highlights
- Trash Poems is a collection of poems from daily writings on found items: receipts, coffee cups, gum wrappers, and even a leaf.
- Author(s): Alex Z Salinas
- 222 Pages
- Art, Folk & Outsider Art
Description
About the Book
A collection of peoms from daily writings on found items: receipts, coffee cups, gum wrappers, and even a leaf. Each poem was written in the moment, with no thought to spelling or grammar, leaving the raw words of the moment on the page.
Book Synopsis
Trash Poems is a collection of poems from daily writings on found items: receipts, coffee cups, gum wrappers, and even a leaf. Each poem was written in the moment, with no thought to spelling or grammar, leaving the raw words of the moment on the page. Trash Poems is more than a book of poetry, it is a revolution and a movement. It tells us "it's okay" to just write, there are no pre-requisites. And at its heart, it is full of raw poetry.
"How ecstatic (and envious!) I am reading Trash Poems. Alex Z. Salinas has manifested a masterpiece of meditative poesy-one part eco/urban art book, one part ADD Leaves of Grass, all parts adhering to the Beat's first thought/best thought. From macro ruminations on family and mortality down to micro observations of a BIC pen, a persistent gnat, a looping Kanye video, Salinas takes note of impermanence with a haiku master's eye/mind, dashing it down on the lost and found objects around us: receipts, cups, wrappers, napkins. All of it, trash. How easily these words can be ash-a nugget left buried for us within a pithy political poem. But no worries, gentle reader, this book will be there for you when you need it. These messages-not-in-bottles, scooped up and cataloged for our convenience." Harold Whit Williams, author of A Rain Ancestral and guitarist for Cotton Mather
Review Quotes
"Do not be fooled by the playful nature of these poems! Each one is a tiny bomb packed with broken glass and coffee grounds. Profound and profane, mundane and holy, penned on the detritus of modern urban life, Salinas' Trash Poems are anything but disposable-they will stay with you for a long, long time." -E. D. Watson, author of Anorexorcism
& so as if the poems eased their way into existence onto the page in his most recent collection Trash Poems, Alex Z. Salinas deconstructs in a crisp concise language relaxed & urbane segueing between life & modern American lit what constitutes trash down to its essence written on gum wrappers, coffee cups, napkins any article not nailed or tied to the ground bits of paper doomed to the recycling bin (there's no fencing Salinas in) become the locus of these fast paced slipstreamed lyrics that dash & dart across your field of vision leaving you unsure if you want to cross the page at the speed of touch only to get crushed head-on or sideswiped by these delightful insightful verbal sonics along with 150 or so photographs documenting how these poems got writ in the first place this colloquial fluid conversation with the world family friends living & dead this dialogue with the reader & the poet himself unfettered poetry filtered thru the audial lens of the poet's audacious verve in a voice that sings yet stings-image after image-evoke contemporary & classical connections which are yours to make in punchy "sparse lines that spare no spar" to quote another poet as you rummage thru the trash looking for the one item the one gem gum gave up its wrapper for-to salvage-finally to realize you've discovered or uncovered a cache a hoard to plunder-suddenly like a kid in a candy store or a pirate of the Caribbean a lá Captain Jack Sparrow, you've GOT to have them- one man's trash after all-well you just got to dig in" - Fernando Esteban Flores, author of Ragged Borders, Red Accordion Blues and BloodSongs
"How ecstatic (and envious!) I am reading Trash Poems. Alex Z. Salinas has manifested a masterpiece of meditative poesy-one part eco/urban art book, one part ADD Leaves of Grass, all parts adhering to the Beat's first thought/best thought. From macro ruminations on family and mortality down to micro observations of a BIC pen, a persistent gnat, a looping Kanye video, Salinas takes note of impermanence with a haiku master's eye/mind, dashing it down on the lost and found objects around us: receipts, cups, wrappers, napkins. All of it, trash. How easily these words can be ash-a nugget left buried for us within a pithy political poem. But no worries, gentle reader, this book will be there for you when you need it. These messages-not-in-bottles, scooped up and cataloged for our convenience. And all of us, lucky enough to be floating here right now to receive them." - Harold Whit Williams, author of A Rain Ancestral and guitarist for Cotton Mather