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The shadow of mothering has never been given a richer, fuller, more debased vision than in Youna Kwak鈥檚 For This and Other Cruelties. Kwak casts a cold eye on the splendid and cruel intransigence of maternal paradoxes in all their impossible double binds, monstrous pleasures, and profane mystifications. Shifting between lyric and prose poems, this collection throws slanted light on the ineffability of our deepest attachments, envisioning a world where mother is 鈥渁 creature whose only enemy could be human.鈥 Kwak brings us face to face with the irreconcilable facts of being mother, mothered, and alive.

鈥淭o be mother or not to be mother is what I kept questioning as I read through Youna Kwak鈥檚 stunning second poetry collection鈥攈ow she muddles as well as mothers the seemingly inconsequential question with her fabulist logic and language. Look carefully, and Kwak鈥檚 鈥榖ook of the death of the mother鈥 grows from the messed-up, bloody bed of race, class, gender, and nation. Kwak鈥檚 鈥榤other鈥 is not unlike Kim Hyesoon鈥檚 鈥榤ommy鈥 in that they perpetually mutate and survive, tragically or not, under the same moon, the same shredded tongue, the same global warfare.鈥濃擠on Mee Choi, author, DMZ Colony

鈥淭he first time I saw Youna Kwak read, she levitated. It must鈥檝e been the force of poetry, the intensity of its expression, lifting her off the floor. Now, a lifetime later, I can see the nature of her gravity more clearly. For This and Other Cruelties casts diamond lights (or nettled shadows) on the poet鈥檚 (daughter鈥檚, descendant鈥檚) attempt to disburden herself of the weight of inheritance, and on the casualties, configured here as cruelties, of achieving it. Kwak鈥檚 heartbreaking grammar of relations and her antigravity of survival overwhelm me with what I, too, must do to fulfill my familial and poetic obligations.鈥濃擝randon Shimoda, author, The Afterlife is Letting Go

鈥淚n this stunning collection, Kwak guides her reader toward the deepest levels of empathy and understanding. Fixing her gaze on the two-headed serpent of domesticity and generational trauma, this is a poet in hot pursuit of new forms, new modes of belonging, new horizons of choice. 鈥榃e had none of us chosen our mothers,鈥 she writes, 鈥榦ur cramped apartments, our bullies or fathers, our stupid haircuts, what we ate, what we wore, and yet here we were, doggedly alive, alike as kin . . . pressing obdurately forward toward burnished human form.鈥欌濃擱ob Schlegel, author, The Lesser Fields

鈥溾業 can鈥檛 show you what I refuse to know and can鈥檛 save what / I refuse to see,鈥 writes Youna Kwak in her fierce, brilliant new book. Kwak is prepared to show and save, adept as she is at finding processes by which to bring forth elusive ideas and emotions. Each of the book鈥檚 sections seem birthed from a new approach, including truncated prose-like paragraphs that explore likeness and difference in relation to race, class, gender, and family; sinuous sentences that lean on sound, syntax, and humor, where the familial and community roles we choose鈥攐r that are chosen for us鈥攁re deepened, questioned, resisted, and re-made. The book鈥檚 first poem begins, 鈥業 am preparing to write a book / about the death of the mother.鈥 I love the unnerving music of Kwak鈥檚 poetry, its range, its riveting intelligence, and the ways it hooks an acute consciousness of mortality to the universe鈥檚 grand indifference.鈥濃擬ichele Glazer, author, On Tact, & the Made Up World

Paperback

ISBN-13
9781685970284
Retail price
$22.00

eBook, Perpetual

ISBN-13
9781685970291
Retail price
$22.00

Publication Details

Publication Details

Publication Date
09/22/2025
Pages
114
Trim size
6 x 9 inches
Edition
1st