Pinion
“I / step into the kitchen because I can / no longer smell the lilac / bush my father cut down,” Monica Rico writes in the opening poem of her astonishing debut collection. Deeply invested in unearthing women’s identity from a patriarchal family structure, these pages catalog life beside loss, the truth of cruelty accompanied by a defiant vitality. Here, where the declaration “I can” is modified to “I can / no longer,” Rico untangles the paradox of love, how a persistent absence keeps the missing object present, asserting itself through grief and memory; the scent of lilac lingers precisely because we cannot smell it anymore. The dual meaning of "pinion" scaffolds this collection, which considers Rico's family and their experiences in the context of her grandparents' immigration to the USA from México, American racial capitalism, and the mass migration catalyzed and necessitated by Western colonialism. “Pinion” in noun form refers to a bird's outer flight feathers; in verb form, it means to bind or sever this part of the wing to hinder flight. Bound up in this word, then, is a thing and its destruction — a possibility and a thwarted hope side by side. Rico creates her own motifs to write a representative genealogy, approaching her family as an ornithologist: across poems, her grandfather (who worked at General Motors) appears as an owl, her grandmother figures as a robin, and the American project shows up in the eagle's warped beak and surveilling eye. A field work of restoration, these poems compose a personal history and a deconstruction of global capitalism as articulated through an encyclopedia of birds. From the chaos of our flawed world, Rico salvages an enduring hope, reminding us that “a broken / song like an ugly duckling isn’t ugly / but unique, and stands out like the flightless / dodo who trusts because it is too awful not to.”
1144472518
Pinion
“I / step into the kitchen because I can / no longer smell the lilac / bush my father cut down,” Monica Rico writes in the opening poem of her astonishing debut collection. Deeply invested in unearthing women’s identity from a patriarchal family structure, these pages catalog life beside loss, the truth of cruelty accompanied by a defiant vitality. Here, where the declaration “I can” is modified to “I can / no longer,” Rico untangles the paradox of love, how a persistent absence keeps the missing object present, asserting itself through grief and memory; the scent of lilac lingers precisely because we cannot smell it anymore. The dual meaning of "pinion" scaffolds this collection, which considers Rico's family and their experiences in the context of her grandparents' immigration to the USA from México, American racial capitalism, and the mass migration catalyzed and necessitated by Western colonialism. “Pinion” in noun form refers to a bird's outer flight feathers; in verb form, it means to bind or sever this part of the wing to hinder flight. Bound up in this word, then, is a thing and its destruction — a possibility and a thwarted hope side by side. Rico creates her own motifs to write a representative genealogy, approaching her family as an ornithologist: across poems, her grandfather (who worked at General Motors) appears as an owl, her grandmother figures as a robin, and the American project shows up in the eagle's warped beak and surveilling eye. A field work of restoration, these poems compose a personal history and a deconstruction of global capitalism as articulated through an encyclopedia of birds. From the chaos of our flawed world, Rico salvages an enduring hope, reminding us that “a broken / song like an ugly duckling isn’t ugly / but unique, and stands out like the flightless / dodo who trusts because it is too awful not to.”
9.99 In Stock
Pinion

Pinion

by Monica Rico
Pinion

Pinion

by Monica Rico

eBook

$9.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

“I / step into the kitchen because I can / no longer smell the lilac / bush my father cut down,” Monica Rico writes in the opening poem of her astonishing debut collection. Deeply invested in unearthing women’s identity from a patriarchal family structure, these pages catalog life beside loss, the truth of cruelty accompanied by a defiant vitality. Here, where the declaration “I can” is modified to “I can / no longer,” Rico untangles the paradox of love, how a persistent absence keeps the missing object present, asserting itself through grief and memory; the scent of lilac lingers precisely because we cannot smell it anymore. The dual meaning of "pinion" scaffolds this collection, which considers Rico's family and their experiences in the context of her grandparents' immigration to the USA from México, American racial capitalism, and the mass migration catalyzed and necessitated by Western colonialism. “Pinion” in noun form refers to a bird's outer flight feathers; in verb form, it means to bind or sever this part of the wing to hinder flight. Bound up in this word, then, is a thing and its destruction — a possibility and a thwarted hope side by side. Rico creates her own motifs to write a representative genealogy, approaching her family as an ornithologist: across poems, her grandfather (who worked at General Motors) appears as an owl, her grandmother figures as a robin, and the American project shows up in the eagle's warped beak and surveilling eye. A field work of restoration, these poems compose a personal history and a deconstruction of global capitalism as articulated through an encyclopedia of birds. From the chaos of our flawed world, Rico salvages an enduring hope, reminding us that “a broken / song like an ugly duckling isn’t ugly / but unique, and stands out like the flightless / dodo who trusts because it is too awful not to.”

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781954245914
Publisher: Four Way Books
Publication date: 03/15/2024
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 183
File size: 983 KB

About the Author

Monica Rico is Mexican American and the author of Pinion, winner of the Four Way Books Levis Prize in Poetry selected by Kaveh Akbar. She holds an MFA from the University of Michigan’s Helen Zell Writers’ Program and is the Program Manager for the Bear River Writers’ Conference. She has published poems in The Atlantic, The Academy of American Poets’ Poem-A-Day, The Slowdown, Ecotone, The Nation, Gastronomica, and The Missouri Review. Follow her at www.monicaricopoet.com.

Read an Excerpt

Birds of a Feather

As the crow flies, so did my father 
before work, after work, between two 
houses like a swan bats his wings 
over the water and flies as free as
a hawk, dazed from dipping in thermals. 
My mother stayed home, eagle-
eyed, counted cans of tomato sauce
and stripped avocados, dropping
their pregnant bellies like a nest.
My father an early bird eager to do
another swan dive from the links
in my mother’s watch, hollow as a
ribcage. Under wing a broken
song like an ugly duckling isn’t ugly
but unique, and stands out like the flightless 
dodo who trusts because it is too awful not to.
 

Table of Contents

Contents

An Unusual Bird Divides the Sky

Mise En Place

Heartbeat and Humidity

Stolen and Unnamed

Cutting the Tail

On the Eve of the 2017 Presidential Inauguration

Yes, In 1952 White Teachers Made Their Students Stand Up and Tell the Class What Their Fathers Did for a Living

The Marriage of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera

Citizenship of the Owl at General Motors

Why I Don’t Go to Church

The Noiseless Flight of Owl Wings

And When We Return, We Are Water

Engine Block (Exploded View)

Great Horned Owl

Patrilineal

Behind the Back of the Robin

Poem in Consideration of My Death

The Eagle, Not the United States

In the Presence of the Robin

Set Free

In the One Photo I Have of My Grandmother

Tomato & Lettuce

Mexican in Michigan

John James Audubon and the Battle of San Jacinto

Get Out of the Water

Past the Forty-Fifth Parallel

México City in the Middle of Michigan

Ferment

The Vows of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera

Resurrection of Prey

Ornithology

The Owls of Saginaw

Luxury

Elegy for My Quinceañera

Each is Another and No Other

Learning to Sail, I Can Only Think of Odysseus and Ask to Be Tied to the Mast

Robin

Shotblast

The Universe, According to Rufino Tamayo

Ode to the Grocery

Second Shift

Hooked Lace

Hand Over Heart

Brain Food

Hemingway Country

Lessons on Becoming Full Grown

What I Found

Feeding Rituals

Sacrament

En Español Por Favor

Optics

Shade Tree Mechanic

Where the Girls Are

In My Own State

What Remains of General Motors

La Patria

Get Out of My House

What General Motors Doesn’t Protect

To Skip a Stone

Northern Cardinal

Soy De La Luna

Domesticate

Five Things Borrowed

Birds of a Feather

Forecast

Only the Snow Will Quiet the Robin

Figurehead

Analog

The Robin Who Turned to Snow

My Mother and the Cardinal

A Lesson from My Father About Electricity

American Crow

Parallel Universe

Cortés Burning the Aviaries

Notes

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews