The House of Broken Things: Kim Moore in conversation with Kristina Diprose
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In TheHouse of Broken Things, motherhood is a spell, a terrible power, an intelligence, and transformative in all its complexity and ambivalence.
In TheHouse of Broken Things, motherhood is a spell, a terrible power, an intelligence, and transformative in all its complexity and ambivalence.
These poems move like myth, invoking the ghosts of The House of Broken Things, where 'Broken mothers and damaged fathers / slept the sleep of those who do not / have time to think, and fractured children / dreamt the things you might expect / that fractured children dream.'Kim Moore's unflinching collection is an astonishing portrait of a mother.
Her body as tender, contested territory.
Her instincts fierce.
Her mind alive with memories of her own childhood, marvelled by love for her young daughter, sharpened with foreboding for her safety in a broken world that has so often made to break her, too.
There are truths our daughters must know, and there are burdens we must never pass on.
To make them strong, must we also teach them to be afraid?The House of Broken Things is a thrilling new work from one of our boldest and most exciting poets.
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Bradford City Library
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