Renato Rosaldo’s first book of poetry was the American Book Award winner, Prayer to Spider Woman/Rezo a la mujer araña (ICOCULT, Saltillo, MX, 2004). An internationally known cultural anthropologist, he started writing poetry in English and Spanish while recovering from a stroke in 1996. Diego Luna’s Insider Tips won the Many Mountains Moving poetry book prize for 2009. He published The Day of Shelly's Death with Duke University Press in 2014. Individual poems won the El Andar contest (2000) and the Many Mountains Moving contest (2005). He is currently a Professor of Cultural Anthropology at New York University and Lucie Stern Professor in the Social Sciences Emeritus at Stanford University. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. The author of Culture and Truth and Ilongot Headhunting, 1883-1974, Rosaldo found “bridges” between anthropology and poetry and coined a term—“antropoeta”—to describe the way he can move back and forth between the two modes of writing.
84 pp, perfect bound, acid-free paper
6" x 9"
Winner of the sixth Many Mountains Moving Press Poetry Book Prize, selected by Martín Espada
Juan Felipe Herrera, Tomás Rivera Endowed Chair in Poetry University of California, Riverside
In Diego Luna, every line speaks and leaves us asking for more. Every image is careful and carefree. Every stanza is elusive and kind to the following stanza—the breath is completely exhaled. In some cases there is the question mark, in others the enjambment; however, you must be on the lookout for a “hard cut” or a montage. After a while, you even forget you are reading. When you stop, you truly stop, not because you are tired, or bored, or trudging along: you become still because something incredible has happened.
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