roughghosts
roughghosts
roughghosts
523 posts
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
roughghosts · 2 days ago
Text
“I never forgot. Everything is there. All I have to do is close my eyes.”: The Emperor by Mackenzy Orcel
I asked for none of this. I was waiting for the bus. I was waiting forever. I think I’ve been waiting since I was born. I sat on the floor for hours, fighting the urge to sleep. Looking beyond the clouds of dust that covered the horizon. The days went by, one looking just like the other. The bus wouldn’t come. In an apartment in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, a man is waiting. He knows that eventually…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
roughghosts · 15 days ago
Text
The words / created their own states of being: "it" by Inger Christensen
It may seem hard to imagine that a single poem (or sequence of poems) extending over 200 pages could become an instant hit upon publication, embraced by critics and the public alike, but that is exactly what happened when Danish poet Inger Christensen released what would become known as her masterwork, it, in 1969. What, you might wonder, does this simple pronoun, “it,” refer to. It might be…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
roughghosts · 26 days ago
Text
As we live by metaphors so we die: The Limit by Rosalind Belben
Ilario watched Anna waiting to die. For months on end he is forced to sit beside a person whom he loves—very much—whose poor head must be filled with thoughts, and images of death. Spare and unflinching in its depiction of an unconventional love and a most conventional death, Rosalind Belben’s The Limit presents the story a middle-aged English woman, prematurely aged and ravaged by cancer, and…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
roughghosts · 30 days ago
Text
For all the possible and impossible futures: Earthrise Stories Pasts Potentials Prophesies by Priya Sarukkai Chabria
Of late, concern for the environment has fallen out of fashion in much of the world. Where I live, and in any other regions, oil companies, and forestry and mining interests exercise an outsize influence on governments, especially in a world of global economic uncertainty, fueling resistance to monitoring greenhouse gas emissions, investing in clean energy projects or promoting electric vehicles.…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
roughghosts · 1 month ago
Text
Dream follows dream: Ceilings by Zuzana Brabcová
Drink them up, swallow those clouds, gulp them down with all your might, because all you’ve got to look forward to now are ceilings. As Ema, the fifty year-old protagonist of Zuzana Brabcová’s Ceilings, takes in her last view of the overcast skies over Prague before the ambulance attendant leads her into the Addiction Treatment Centre of the hospital, she knows that it will be months before she…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
1 note · View note
roughghosts · 2 months ago
Text
“There is something about only being able to get lost when you’re not thinking about it”: Natalja’s Stories by Inger Christensen
—There was once a woman who travelled all the way from Crimea to Denmark so that she could bury her mother. This woman, Natalja, was born in Russia to a Danish woman who had been abducted by a Russian silk trader, and when the Revolution broke out she and her mother were forced to flee the country. Along the way, her mother became sick and died of dysentery, so Natalja gathered some ashes from…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
roughghosts · 2 months ago
Text
A life lost in stories: My Kingdom is Dying by Evald Flisar
Evald Flisar (b. 1945) is one of Slovenia’s best known and most prolific writers. He has travelled extensively, his work has been translated into at least forty languages,  and his plays have been performed around the world. But, as is not uncommon for writers from his corner of Europe, it is one thing to be widely read, quite another to be a household name—at least beyond one’s native borders.…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
roughghosts · 2 months ago
Text
Memories, visions, and grief: The Dissenters by Youssef Rakha
I think I hear the dawn azan much earlier than it is supposed to sound. The world, spaced out, is speeding down some derelict highway in time. And long before my attic visions start, Shimo, I am thinking it is time that happens to people. We talk about having and saving and wasting it as if it is ours to work with, but really it is we who are time’s property. It molds and meddles with us, changes…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
roughghosts · 2 months ago
Text
Marking eleven years of roughghosts with a few thoughts about writing book reviews
It always catches me by surprise, that annual notification from WordPress informing that yet another year has passed. As of yesterday, May 31, 2025, roughghosts is eleven years old. Each anniversary leaves me a little bemused. After all, this modest corner of the internet was birthed at the height of a major manic episode—one that would end my career and fundamentally change my life. And…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
1 note · View note
roughghosts · 2 months ago
Text
A mirror to a life: Self-Portrait in the Studio by Giorgio Agamben
A form of life that keeps itself in relation to a poetic practice, however that may be, is always in the studio, always in the studio. Granted that what Giorgio Agamben calls a “studio” might be better understood by English language readers as a “study,” the ideal space is the same: some kind of a desk , plenty of shelving for books, and some room on the walls for  a few well-chosen prints or…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
roughghosts · 3 months ago
Text
What the streets cannot retain: Border Documents by Arturo Soto
Considering the escalating tensions on the Mexico – US border, heightened even more under the present American administration, Mexican photographer and writer Arturo Soto’s new photo book, Border Documents, is an especially opportune release. The images belong to today; the texts to another time. The late fifties through the late seventies, to be exact. They reflect the environment in which his…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
roughghosts · 3 months ago
Text
What passes and what remains: Walter Benjamin Stares at the Sea by C.D. Rose
The fictional world of British writer C. D. Rose is one that slips in and out of time, balancing the fantastic and the realistic, peopled with the lonely, the lost, and the brilliant misfits, some drawn from history, others from his expansive imagination. His universe is at once familiar and strange, and as is the case with the best literary fables, it offers a welcome refuge in a troubled world.…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
3 notes · View notes
roughghosts · 3 months ago
Text
Elegy on the wing: Butterfly Valley by Inger Christensen
Since reading The Condition of Secrecy, a collection of essays by Danish poet and writer Inger Christensen (1935–2009) In January, I have set out to read one of her works each month until I run out of available volumes. This past month was largely absorbed by working for and worrying about the Canadian Federal election which has just passed, so my reading was scattered at best, and most suited to…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
roughghosts · 4 months ago
Text
In that strange, that golden light: Psyche Running – Selected Poems, 2005–2022 by Durs Grünbein
And suddenly you saw it, far below the coast road, after the twelfth curve, stomach surging from the hair-pin drive. En route for the south; so we sped on perched above the drop, windows down. Sorrento with its villas, its fan palms, had been swallowed by the plug-hole of the mirror in a great green swirl. It hung in the haze, a hulk of bare rock. The sea dead still. Not a trace of myth, but for…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
roughghosts · 4 months ago
Text
To translate the human experience: Arabic, between Love and War, edited by Norah Alkharrashi and Yasmine Haj
We live in a world that is always in flux. Conflict, natural disasters, and political destabilization are continually reshaping our world and threatening our future on an intimate, community and global scale. An element of the universality of the human condition unites us in our response to these factors while privilege, culture, and history set us apart. To begin to understand where others have…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
roughghosts · 4 months ago
Text
I who dreamed of Africas: The Harmattan Winds by Sylvain Trudel
As for me, I didn’t exist until I was six months old, because up to then no one wanted to be bothered with such a case. Just my luck, I was not an official being, since there was no trace in the records of my coming into the world. Born by the side of the road like a natural disaster incarnate, I had not known the holy oil of baptism, and no one thought to scrawl my name on a government document…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
roughghosts · 4 months ago
Text
The woman on page eight: Azorno by Inger Christensen
Believe me, I know how dangerous it is to dream of Azorno. Believe me, I know how dangerous it is. I have known Azorno long enough to realize that it’s not dreams that come true. Danish poet Inger Christensen, in her essay “It’s All Words,” insists that: “ . . . poems aren’t made out of experiences, or out of thoughts, ideas, or musings about anything. Poems are made out of words.” To some…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
3 notes · View notes