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Here in the (Middle) of Nowhere

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In this bold hybrid collection of poetry, flash fiction, and Afrofuturism sci-fi, the award-winning interdisciplinary writer and author of Side Notes from the Archivist explores what happens when god is a Black woman in a town. What happens when there are multiple universes in the middle of nowhere?

And what if in each universe there reigned other Black woman gods? One million versions of god, and one million saints to watch over us? And what if this Black woman god were placed here on earth?

These are just a few of the questions Anastacia-Reneé asks in this daring and mind-bending hybrid collection. Hers is a universe of striking variety—monsters, nontraditional saints, witches, zombies, the couple in the apartment next door, the wise elders from down the block, and gods watching over us all—as well as community and connectedness.

With a prose storyline and characters that connect through family, time, and place, Anastacia-Reneé paints world(s) rich with wonder and the paranormal as she peers into the lives of everyday people and spectacular creatures inhabiting not just our neighborhoods, but other dimensions. Here in the (Middle) of Nowhere is about interstellar ancestry, community and spirituality. It is about the things we invoke, conjure, and rely on to maintain joy as we keep it moving through difficult eras. Anastacia-Reneé's power imbues her spellbinding storytelling with lovingly rendered characters brought to life in lyrical poetry. She builds worlds within worlds and dares us to fully see and love ourselves in all our complexity.


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    • Booklist

      February 15, 2024
      Artist and poet Anastacia-Rene� envisions other dimensions with real-world essence in this latest collection of striking poems and flash fiction. A god named Lucile is omnipresent in the mythical iterations of the world, and the mythical blends with reality. The world building within stanzas and brief paragraphs is vivid and rife with environmental descriptions and glances of the characters who populate each dimension. Familiar aspects of language, religions, and culture are reimagined, as in "unknown saints," a running list of saints of ordinary, understandable situations, "saint marie regalia saint of bars go to her when you want to be drunk anoint your sacred skin with saliva then salt." Extraordinary turns of phrase are peppered throughout these pieces, such as, "can I put my second soul on layaway & get a neighborhood discount for the way this human body fades to a morphine drip." Anastacia-Rene�'s extraordinary, intriguing, afrofuturistic, and mystical collection explores family, community, grief, and love.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2024
      An exploration of the mystic within community, told through poetry and flash fiction. This abstract collection, while centered on a compilation of images and themes, including vampires, shared and individual spaces, patron saints, and Black and queer femininity, functions best when approached sonically. As the words flow from one piece to the next in a manner mimicking spoken-word poetry, a world slowly begins to emerge. It could perhaps be our world, with quiet lunchroom dramas, apartments, and cheating men--or it could be another world entirely, the world of a goddess named "lucile" and of a great tree and of the patron saints of lipstick, bars, and more mundane--or divine--things. While not strictly science fiction or Afrofuturism, this work instead draws on concepts from fantasy and SF such as witches and vampires and on Afrofuturistic themes of optimistic futures and presents. More than anything, the fantastic is a metaphor for how our own reality could be. Throughout these lines, children grow, women explore their relationships and their identities, and we bear witness to a community that changes and flourishes through both the bad times and the good. Best when read aloud, this narrative can be taken in small quantities as individual narrators tell their stories or taken as one whole, greater than the many stories contained within. Loose poetry and fictions playing on sounds and images and multiple planes of resonance.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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