Helene Cardona's Blog - Posts Tagged "freedom"
Birnam Wood wins the 2022 Independent Press Award!
Birnam Wood (José Manuel Cardona translation, Salmon Poetry) wins the 2022 Independent Press Award!
Thank you #IndependentPressAward #2022IPA #GabbyBookAwards
"We arrived and the miracle happened.
It was the sea and the wind in the bells.
We came from far, from years
Thirsty as dust, from humble
fishermen’s nets on barren shore."
—José Manuel Cardona
The human condition, exile, love and death, freedom and fate, renunciation and resignation, the homeland of Ibiza and the diaspora are themes dominating Birnam Wood. A very clear thematic unity is discernible in the work of José Manuel Cardona: an unflinching look at identity through heightened language. These poems form part of a major on-going tradition in Spanish poetry. His work is marked by a predilection for the classical Castilian hendecasyllable as well as free verse, and by a strong interest in social themes.
The book reflects a social conscience and expresses great pain and love, in particular the poet’s love for his native island of Ibiza. It is also filled with literary influences. Its title, El bosque de Birnam, is a metaphor drawn from Shakespeare’s Macbeth. Birnam Wood speaks against abuse of power and for overthrowing all illegitimate governments. Lady Macbeth is foretold that she will have cause for worry when the Birnam Wood rises and marches against her, yet she does not heed the warning. Franco’s rise to power after a military coup launched a Civil War against a republic democratically elected in peace. Birnam Wood stands for resistance to illegitimate and illegal regimes.
Thank you #IndependentPressAward #2022IPA #GabbyBookAwards
"We arrived and the miracle happened.
It was the sea and the wind in the bells.
We came from far, from years
Thirsty as dust, from humble
fishermen’s nets on barren shore."
—José Manuel Cardona



The book reflects a social conscience and expresses great pain and love, in particular the poet’s love for his native island of Ibiza. It is also filled with literary influences. Its title, El bosque de Birnam, is a metaphor drawn from Shakespeare’s Macbeth. Birnam Wood speaks against abuse of power and for overthrowing all illegitimate governments. Lady Macbeth is foretold that she will have cause for worry when the Birnam Wood rises and marches against her, yet she does not heed the warning. Franco’s rise to power after a military coup launched a Civil War against a republic democratically elected in peace. Birnam Wood stands for resistance to illegitimate and illegal regimes.
Published on March 23, 2022 14:44
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Tags:
award-winning-poetry, bilingual-books, bilingula-poetry, birnam-wood, death, diaspora, exile, freedom, heightened-language, helenecardona, human-condition, ibiza, identity, inspiring-books, love, macbeth, salmonpoetry, shakespeare, social-conscience, social-themes, spanish-civil-war, spanish-poetry, translation
Birnam Wood wins the NYC Big Book Award



Probably the best poetry collection I’ve read all year! A passionate collection. Gorgeous! —Bonnie Hearn Hill’s Great Day Book Club’s Book of the Month
The human condition, exile, love and death, freedom and fate, renunciation and resignation, the homeland of Ibiza and the diaspora are themes dominating Birnam Wood. A very clear thematic unity is discernible in the work of José Manuel Cardona: an unflinching look at identity through heightened language. These poems form part of a major on-going tradition in Spanish poetry. His work is marked by a predilection for the classical Castilian hendecasyllable as well as free verse, and by a strong interest in social themes.
The book reflects a social conscience and expresses great pain and love, in particular the poet’s love for his native island of Ibiza. It is also filled with literary influences. Its title, El bosque de Birnam, is a metaphor drawn from Shakespeare’s Macbeth. Birnam Wood speaks against abuse of power and for overthrowing all illegitimate governments. Lady Macbeth is foretold that she will have cause for worry when the Birnam Wood rises and marches against her, yet she does not heed the warning. Franco’s rise to power after a military coup launched a Civil War against a republic democratically elected in peace. Birnam Wood stands for resistance to illegitimate and illegal regimes.
Published on January 05, 2023 12:32
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Tags:
award-winning-poetry, best-poetry, bilingual-books, bilingual-poetry, birnam-wood, death, diaspora, exile, freedom, heightened-language, helenecardona, human-condition, ibiza, identity, inspiring-books, love, macbeth, salmonpoetry, shakespeare, social-conscience, social-themes, spanish-author, spanish-civil-war, spanish-poet, spanish-poetry, translated-poetry, translation
The Abduction won an Albertine and FACE Foundation Grant!
I'd delighted to share that The Abduction, my translation of Maram Al-Masri's Le Rapt, won an Albertine and FACE Foundation Grant from Villa Albertine.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
Using artfully spare language and repetition, Maram Al-Masri takes us deep into the emotional
complexities of losing her young child to a patriarchal society. Hélène Cardona’s deft translations capture both the stark immediacy and haunting music of these moving poems, almost letting us believe they were written in English.
—Martha Collins, author of Casualty Reports and Because What Else Could I Do, winner of the
Poetry Society of America’s William Carlos Williams Award
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
With a tender eloquence that equals the French original, Hélène Cardona brings into English a
harrowing tale, The Abduction by Maram Al-Masri, of a new mother devastated by the abduction
of her son, kidnapped by his father to be raised in Syria. Now, as the distraught mother powerfully notes, “war rages within me.” Cardona vividly conveys both palpable love and the wisdom learned from tragic loss: “To love, it is to prepare yourself / to be abandoned.” As The Abduction proves, Hélène Cardona is a translator who has the exquisite sensitivity and erudition
that this brave, vulnerable work deserves.
—Cynthia Hogue, winner of the Harold Morton Landon Translation Award from the Academy
of American Poets, author of In June the Labyrinth
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
Using artfully spare language and repetition, Maram Al-Masri takes us deep into the emotional
complexities of losing her young child to a patriarchal society. Hélène Cardona’s deft translations capture both the stark immediacy and haunting music of these moving poems, almost letting us believe they were written in English.
—Martha Collins, author of Casualty Reports and Because What Else Could I Do, winner of the
Poetry Society of America’s William Carlos Williams Award
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
With a tender eloquence that equals the French original, Hélène Cardona brings into English a
harrowing tale, The Abduction by Maram Al-Masri, of a new mother devastated by the abduction



that this brave, vulnerable work deserves.
—Cynthia Hogue, winner of the Harold Morton Landon Translation Award from the Academy
of American Poets, author of In June the Labyrinth
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
Published on April 06, 2023 11:21
•
Tags:
arab-poetry, creative-writing, cynthia-hogue, cyrus-cassells, diane-seuss, english-translation, exile, freedom, french-poetry, grant-winner, grief, kidnapping, lauren-camp, le-rapt, literary-translation, loss, love, maram-al-masri-helene-cardona, martha-collins, missing-child, motherhood, parenting, patriarchal-society, poems, poetry, syria, syrian-poetry, the-abduction, villa-albertine, war, white-pine-press
The Abduction, my translation of Maram Al-Masri is out!

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
Each small stanza of The Abduction picks at the torn seam between parent and child. As the narrator peers “out a window/ I haven’t cleaned for a long time,” we also see what has been snatched away. Arabic poet Al-Masri writes of the changed shape of her future, a devastation eloquently translated by Hélène Cardona.
—Lauren Camp, 2022 to 2025 New Mexico Poet Laureate and author of Took House
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
Maram Al-Masri’s Le Rapt, as translated by Hélène Cardona, opens with the simple delights of a mother engaging with her young child, speaking to him as if he is a confidant. “He is occupied / making his ten fingers move / to convince me that love is the natural fruit / of the tree of life,” she writes, and what could be more wonderful than that? Bliss, however, is followed by unbearable grief, when her child is abducted and separated from her for years by her then-husband. The poems become the vessel for her dialogue with her missing child, and with her sorrow. Even when mother and child experience a complex reunion years later, each has learned to fear loving the other, and her son must face a second infancy, this time as an immigrant, much less blissful than the first. As a reader of poetry, I am compelled by the raw spareness of these poems, their keen honesty, and their refusal to provide us with a restoration arc. As a parent, I feel empathy, and awe at Al-Masri’s survival.
—Diane Seuss, author of frank: sonnets, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and the National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
Published on April 09, 2023 14:17
•
Tags:
arab-poetry, creative-writing, cynthia-hogue, cyrus-cassells, diane-seuss, english-translation, exile, freedom, french-poetry, grant-winner, grief, kidnapping, lauren-camp, le-rapt, literary-translation, loss, love, maram-al-masri-helene-cardona, martha-collins, missing-child, motherhood, parenting, patriarchal-society, poems, poetry, syria, syrian-poetry, the-abduction, villa-albertine, war, white-pine-press
Great news about The Abduction
I'd thrilled to share that The Abduction, my translation of Maram Al-Masri's Le Rapt, won an Albertine and FACE Foundation Grant from Villa Albertine.
Using artfully spare language and repetition, Maram Al-Masri takes us deep into the emotional
complexities of losing her young child to a patriarchal society. Hélène Cardona’s deft translations capture both the stark immediacy and haunting music of these moving poems, almost letting us believe they were written in English.
—Martha Collins, author of Casualty Reports and Because What Else Could I Do, winner of the
Poetry Society of America’s William Carlos Williams Award
With a tender eloquence that equals the French original, Hélène Cardona brings into English a
harrowing tale, her son, kidnapped by his father to be raised in Syria. Now, as the distraught mother powerfully notes, “war rages within me.” Cardona vividly conveys both palpable love and the wisdom learned from tragic loss: “To love, it is to prepare yourself / to be abandoned.” As The Abduction proves, Hélène Cardona is a translator who has the exquisite sensitivity and erudition
that this brave, vulnerable work deserves.
—Cynthia Hogue, winner of the Harold Morton Landon Translation Award from the Academy
of American Poets, author of In June the Labyrinth

complexities of losing her young child to a patriarchal society. Hélène Cardona’s deft translations capture both the stark immediacy and haunting music of these moving poems, almost letting us believe they were written in English.
—Martha Collins, author of Casualty Reports and Because What Else Could I Do, winner of the
Poetry Society of America’s William Carlos Williams Award
With a tender eloquence that equals the French original, Hélène Cardona brings into English a
harrowing tale, her son, kidnapped by his father to be raised in Syria. Now, as the distraught mother powerfully notes, “war rages within me.” Cardona vividly conveys both palpable love and the wisdom learned from tragic loss: “To love, it is to prepare yourself / to be abandoned.” As The Abduction proves, Hélène Cardona is a translator who has the exquisite sensitivity and erudition
that this brave, vulnerable work deserves.
—Cynthia Hogue, winner of the Harold Morton Landon Translation Award from the Academy
of American Poets, author of In June the Labyrinth
Published on April 11, 2023 18:57
•
Tags:
arab-poetry, creative-writing, cynthia-hogue, cyrus-cassells, diane-seuss, english-translation, exile, freedom, french-poetry, grant-winner, grief, kidnapping, lauren-camp, le-rapt, literary-translation, loss, love, maram-al-masri-helene-cardona, martha-collins, missing-child, motherhood, parenting, patriarchal-society, poems, poetry, syria, syrian-poetry, the-abduction, villa-albertine, war, white-pine-press
Great news about The Abduction
I'd thrilled to share that The Abduction, my translation of Maram Al-Masri's Le Rapt, won an Albertine and FACE Foundation Grant from Villa Albertine.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
Using artfully spare language and repetition, Maram Al-Masri takes us deep into the emotional
complexities of losing her young child to a patriarchal society. Hélène Cardona’s deft translations capture both the stark immediacy and haunting music of these moving poems, almost letting us believe they were written in English.
—Martha Collins, author of Casualty Reports and Because What Else Could I Do, winner of the
Poetry Society of America’s William Carlos Williams Award
With a tender eloquence that equals the French original, Hélène Cardona brings into English a
harrowing tale, her son, kidnapped by his father to be raised in Syria. Now, as the distraught mother powerfully notes, “war rages within me.” Cardona vividly conveys both palpable love and the wisdom learned from tragic loss: “To love, it is to prepare yourself / to be abandoned.” As The Abduction proves, Hélène Cardona is a translator who has the exquisite sensitivity and erudition
that this brave, vulnerable work deserves.
—Cynthia Hogue, winner of the Harold Morton Landon Translation Award from the Academy
of American Poets, author of In June the Labyrinth
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...

complexities of losing her young child to a patriarchal society. Hélène Cardona’s deft translations capture both the stark immediacy and haunting music of these moving poems, almost letting us believe they were written in English.
—Martha Collins, author of Casualty Reports and Because What Else Could I Do, winner of the
Poetry Society of America’s William Carlos Williams Award
With a tender eloquence that equals the French original, Hélène Cardona brings into English a
harrowing tale, her son, kidnapped by his father to be raised in Syria. Now, as the distraught mother powerfully notes, “war rages within me.” Cardona vividly conveys both palpable love and the wisdom learned from tragic loss: “To love, it is to prepare yourself / to be abandoned.” As The Abduction proves, Hélène Cardona is a translator who has the exquisite sensitivity and erudition
that this brave, vulnerable work deserves.
—Cynthia Hogue, winner of the Harold Morton Landon Translation Award from the Academy
of American Poets, author of In June the Labyrinth
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
Published on April 11, 2023 18:57
•
Tags:
arab-poetry, creative-writing, cynthia-hogue, cyrus-cassells, diane-seuss, english-translation, exile, freedom, french-poetry, grant-winner, grief, kidnapping, lauren-camp, le-rapt, literary-translation, loss, love, maram-al-masri-helene-cardona, martha-collins, missing-child, motherhood, parenting, patriarchal-society, poems, poetry, syria, syrian-poetry, the-abduction, villa-albertine, war, white-pine-press
Book Trailer for The Abduction!
Check out the book trailer for The Abduction, my translation of Maram Al Masri's Le Rapt!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_jAnY...
"where the sky is made of tales
and where the trees are poems
I will take my little one for a walk."
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
Thank you Gloria Mindock for the beautiful book trailer😘
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_jAnY...
"where the sky is made of tales
and where the trees are poems
I will take my little one for a walk."
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...



Thank you Gloria Mindock for the beautiful book trailer😘
Published on April 17, 2023 23:34
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Tags:
arab-poetry, book-trailer, creative-writing, cynthia-hogue, cyrus-cassells, diane-seuss, english-translation, exile, freedom, french-poetry, gloria-mindock, grant-winner, grief, kidnapping, lauren-camp, le-rapt, literary-translation, loss, love, maram-al-masri-helene-cardona, martha-collins, missing-child, motherhood, parenting, patriarchal-society, poems, poetry, syria, syrian-poetry, the-abduction, villa-albertine, war, white-pine-press
Celebrate Mother's Day with The Abduction
Celebrate Mother's Day with The Abduction, the story of a mother who reunites with her son after 13 years.
The Abduction
Winner of an Albertine and FACE Foundation Grant from Villa Albertine.
"Hélène Cardona's deft translations capture both the stark immediacy and haunting music of these moving poems, almost letting us believe they were written in English."
—Martha Collins, author of Casualty Reports
"Maram Al-Masri's Le Rapt, as translated by Hélène Cardona, opens with the simple delights of a mother engaging with her young child, speaking to him as if he is a confidant. "He is occupied / making his ten fingers move / to convince me that love is the natural fruit / of the tree of life," she writes, and what could be more wonderful than that? Bliss, however, is followed by unbearable grief, when her child is abducted and separated from her for years by her then husband.
The poems become the vessel for her dialogue with her missing child, and with her sorrow. Even when mother and child experience a complex reunion years later, each has learned to fear loving the other, and her son must face a second infancy, this time as an immigrant, much less blissful than the first. As a reader of poetry, I am compelled by the raw spareness of these poems, their keen honesty, and their refusal to provide us with a restoration arc. As a parent, I feel empathy, and awe at Al-Masri's survival."
—Diane Seuss, author of frank: sonnets, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
The Abduction
Winner of an Albertine and FACE Foundation Grant from Villa Albertine.
"Hélène Cardona's deft translations capture both the stark immediacy and haunting music of these moving poems, almost letting us believe they were written in English."
—Martha Collins, author of Casualty Reports

The poems become the vessel for her dialogue with her missing child, and with her sorrow. Even when mother and child experience a complex reunion years later, each has learned to fear loving the other, and her son must face a second infancy, this time as an immigrant, much less blissful than the first. As a reader of poetry, I am compelled by the raw spareness of these poems, their keen honesty, and their refusal to provide us with a restoration arc. As a parent, I feel empathy, and awe at Al-Masri's survival."
—Diane Seuss, author of frank: sonnets, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry

Published on May 11, 2023 13:39
•
Tags:
arab-poetry, book-trailer, creative-writing, cynthia-hogue, cyrus-cassells, diane-seuss, english-translation, exile, freedom, french-poetry, gloria-mindock, grant-winner, grief, kidnapping, lauren-camp, le-rapt, literary-translation, loss, love, maram-al-masri-helene-cardona, martha-collins, maternal-love, missing-child, mother-s-day, mother-s-love, motherhood, mothers, mothers-day, parenting, patriarchal-society, poems, poetry, syria, syrian-poetry, the-abduction, villa-albertine, war, white-pine-press
Readers Favorite's 5 Star Review for The Abduction!
So happy! The Abduction received a Readers Favorite's 5 Starred Review:
https://readersfavorite.com/book-revi...
If anyone would like a signed copy, please DM me! 😘
Huge thanks to Luwi Nyakansaila and Readers Favorite 🥰



If anyone would like a signed copy, please DM me! 😘
Huge thanks to Luwi Nyakansaila and Readers Favorite 🥰
Published on July 10, 2023 13:26
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Tags:
5starreview, arab-poetry, book-trailer, creative-writing, cynthia-hogue, cyrus-cassells, diane-seuss, english-translation, exile, freedom, french-poetry, gloria-mindock, grant-winner, grief, kidnapping, lauren-camp, le-rapt, literary-translation, loss, love, maram-al-masri-helene-cardona, martha-collins, maternal-love, missing-child, mother-s-day, mother-s-love, motherhood, mothers, mothers-day, mothersrights, parenting, patriarchal-society, poems, poetry, readersfavorite, socialissues, syria, syrian-poetry, the-abduction, villa-albertine, war, white-pine-press, womensrights
Hélène Cardona with the Cobalt Poets today!
This week Cobalt Poets presents Hélène Cardona plus open reading:
Hélène Cardona’s Life in Suspension is called “a vivid self-portrait as scholar, seer and muse” by John Ashbery, and David Mason described Dreaming My Animal Selves as “liminal, mystical and other-worldly,” adding, “this is a poet who writes in a rare light.” Hailed as visionary by Richard Wilbur, Cardona’s luminous poetry explores consciousness, the power of place, and ancestral roots. It is poetry of alchemy and healing, a gateway to the unconscious and the dream world. She has authored 5 translations, is the recipient of over 20 awards & honors, and her work has been translated into 19 languages.
Dreaming My Animal Selves / Le Songe de mes Âmes AnimalesLife in Suspension: La Vie Suspendue
Tuesday, Aug 15, 7:30 PST.
Signups for the open reading start at 7:15pm in the Zoom Chat.
https://www.facebook.com/events/27835...
When you RSVP, please use your full real name as your Zoom identity so you can be let in, and DM me so I can let Rick Lupert know.
Hélène Cardona’s Life in Suspension is called “a vivid self-portrait as scholar, seer and muse” by John Ashbery, and David Mason described Dreaming My Animal Selves as “liminal, mystical and other-worldly,” adding, “this is a poet who writes in a rare light.” Hailed as visionary by Richard Wilbur, Cardona’s luminous poetry explores consciousness, the power of place, and ancestral roots. It is poetry of alchemy and healing, a gateway to the unconscious and the dream world. She has authored 5 translations, is the recipient of over 20 awards & honors, and her work has been translated into 19 languages.






Signups for the open reading start at 7:15pm in the Zoom Chat.
https://www.facebook.com/events/27835...
When you RSVP, please use your full real name as your Zoom identity so you can be let in, and DM me so I can let Rick Lupert know.
Published on August 15, 2023 08:12
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Tags:
alchemy, arab-poetry, consciousness, creative-writing, cynthia-hogue, cyrus-cassells, david-mason, diane-seuss, dreaming-my-animal-selves, english-translation, exile, freedom, french-poetry, grant-winner, grief, healing, helene-cardona, john-ashbery, kidnapping, lauren-camp, le-rapt, liminal, literary-translation, loss, love, maram-al-masri-helene-cardona, martha-collins, missing-child, motherhood, mystical, other-worldly, parenting, patriarchal-society, poems, poet, poetry, rare-light, she-has-authored-5-translations, syria, syrian-poetry, the-abduction, villa-albertine, visionary, war, white-pine-press