Between Sanctity and Sand

Yael S. Hacohen

Research output: Book/ReportBook

Abstract

A quietude lives in Between Sanctity and Sand—through Yael Shoshana Hachen‘s strong voice.
–Yusef Komunyakaa
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An heir to Yehuda Amichai, Yael Hacohen is a young poet with an old soul, and her harrowing, war-torn lyrics bring something utterly fresh into American poetry—a shocked memory of military life, a desert consciousness that hovers between the sacred and the profane, and an awe-inspiring sense of poetry that is both ancient and new. This short book is a gem.

–Edward Hirsch

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What a revelatory and painful pleasure it is to read the fierce lyrics in Yael Hacohen‘s “Between Sanctity and Sand”; this formidable debut packs a punch, conjuring the terrors of war while retaining the tender humanity and intimacies of song.
–Deborah Landau
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Yael S. Hacohen‘s poems conjure, with vivid, soul-piercing immediacy, the view from behind a soldier’s eyes, drawing on her experience as a commander in the Israeli military. In one poem, a young trainee feels the first awesome thrill of a weapon in her hand: “I could shoot like an angel./ I could hit a running target/ at six-hundred-fifty meters.” Terrifying moments are rendered as if in time-lapse photography: “After he shoots, you want to shoot back, but you didn’t/ put in the time. And now you can’t get your breathing straight.” The speaker of one of these poems even grieves her enemy: “Little boy, what could lead you to strap a bomb to your chest?” Hacohen neither shrinks from nor condemns war; she seek to comprehend it, to acknowledge its persistence. “Listen, even the olive tree/ needs to be beaten with a stick,” she advises, which is perhaps to say you can love your enemy and still not have peace.
–Craig Morgan Teicher
Original languageAmerican English
PublisherFinishing Line Press
Number of pages34
ISBN (Print)9781646624706
StatePublished - 2021

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