Gaza

The Poem Said Its Piece, Pocket Poets Series No. 64

Nasser Rabah author Ammiel Alcalay translator Emna Zghal translator Khalid al-Hilli translator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:City Lights Books

Publishing:29th May '25

£12.99

This title is due to be published on 29th May, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Gaza cover

Like Mandelstam, Akhmatova, and Vallejo, Gazan poet Nasser Rabah embodies the magnificent possibilities of the human spirit and imagination under extreme conditions.

"Nasser Rabah is my favorite living poet in Palestine. The musicality of his lines could replace my heartbeats and I would feel more than alive."—Mosab Abu Toha, author of Things You May Find Hidden In My Ear

Born in Gaza in 1963, Rabah spent some of his formative years in Egypt, before returning to Gaza in his early twenties, where he has lived ever since. There, among the generations who built its neighborhoods and populate its villages, in a place of great natural beauty and vibrant cities, living under constant surveillance, military occupation, blockade, siege and regular attack, in a culture steeped in literary and spiritual tradition, Rabah developed his distinctively singular vision and poetics.

This is Rabah's first book in English translation. The poems include a selection from three of his published collections, along with new poems written after October 2023, during the full-scale Israeli assault on Gaza. Throughout, we find a combination of irreverence and fidelity to tradition, a sense of surrealism infusing the depiction of everyday incomprehensibilities, and an unsettling, delicate tenderness always on edge in an atmosphere of sensory inundation and emotional saturation. Rabah's poems can be raw and uninhibited by social or literary conventions, exploring and questioning one's relationship to divinity in absurd circumstances while confronting the sacred cows of his own society, along with the sometimes voyeuristic interest from those on the outside of it. His poetry constantly interrogates—sometimes playfully and sometimes in utter existential despair—the paradoxes and difficulties of expression and of writing itself. Nasser Rabah is a poet we have much to learn from.

This is a bi-lingual edition and includes the original versions in Arabic.

"Nasser Rabah's beautiful poems offer a generosity of close attention on a dignified life. A life lived alongside, against, and in opposition to the brutalities of violent occupation, but a life teeming with dignity and worthwhile affections, small and large.This, to say nothing of how the poems sing on a line level, with a rich music. 'I was sand gently grazed by grass woven through me' hums with a vivid clarity, such small and sweet songs run throughout this collection, which is a massive achievement."—Hanif Abdurraqib, author of There's Always This Year: On Basketball and Ascension

"Majestic, magnificent, searing, stunning—and as close to a reader as the heart-shaped cake broken in half for the children. Nasser Rabah is a poet so rich with life and visionary lyricism, he should never have to suffer such brutal injustices done to his people. With gratitude to the translators for their elegant renderings, may these poems travel far and find love everywhere."—Naomi Shihab Nye, author of Grace Notes

"Besieged by death and destruction, the poet performs his eternal task; saying the unsayable. Rabah digs deep, finds these rivulets of tears, and gives them wings. Rescued poems that rescue us from our own silence, reminding us that poetry is a refuge in this cruel world. Elegantly translated in a labor of love and solidarity."—Sinan Antoon, author ofPostcards from the Underworld

"After reading this book, Adorno's famous dictum that writing poetry after a genocide could only be an act of barbarism comes off as lazy at best. Nasser Rabah's poems are alive with so much sadness, hallucinatory beauty, and harsh delight that it hurts to read them. But then everything is alive in these pages—clouds, trees, rivers, clothes, darkness, dreams, the night, language certainly, and poems without doubt.—Ben Ehrenreich, author of The Way to the Spring: Life and Death in Palestine

ISBN: 9780872869127

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

216 pages

Bilingual edition