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by Bruce Weigl
After years of profound spiritual work, our most powerful poet of the Viet Nam War now turns to our potential for redemption. The book’s locus is Chung Luong, birthplace of Weigl’s Vietnamese daughter, Hanh, and one of the poorest and most beautiful places on earth. That vivid contrast, between beauty and utter poverty, is what drives this book, allowing the poet to view the collapse of empire—one of the book’s central themes—from a new psychic vantage. While these tough, retrospective poems break into a new realm of compassion and forgiveness, they are just as steely and truth-telling as any of his earlier works, which were brilliant explorations of the damages of war and the violent potential of the human imagination. But readers of Weigl’s past books (among them *Song of Napalm*, *What Saves Us*, *The Monkey Wars*) and his critically acclaimed memoir, *The Circle of Hanh*, will recognize the distance he has traveled. As he himself has put it, “I began to feel as if I might try to as
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Richardson, John
Golding, Michael