Poukahangatus by Tayi Tibble

Poukahangatus

by Tayi Tibble

This collection speaks about beauty, activism, power and popular culture with compelling guile, a darkness, a deep understanding and sensuality. It dives through noir, whakama and kitsch and emerges dripping with colour and liquor. There's whakapapa, funk (in all its connotations) and fetishisation. The poems map colonisation of many kinds through intergenerational, indigenous domesticity, sex, image and disjunction. They time-travel through the powdery mint-green 1960s and the polaroid sunshine 1970s to the present day. Their language and forms are liquid-sometimes as lush as what they describe, other times deliberately biblical or oblique. It all says: here is a writer who is experiencing herself as powerful, restrained but unafraid, already confident enough to make a phat splash on the page.
-Hinemoana Baker

Reviewed by bookstagramofmine on

4 of 5 stars

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Thank you NetGalley and Knopf for the chance to read and review this book!

 

 

I think the blurb on Goodreads kinda says it all. That this is a take on being a young woman and all the different identities that come into play. Between the harmless fantasies 'Scabbing’ and ‘The Pussycat Dolls’ to the fetishization of ‘Starless Nights in Washington.’ You have childhood memories of mothers mortified and amused (The Burial.) and you can see the fate of those older than you (Assimilation).

 

Read my full post here:

https://the-girl-who-reads.com/poukahangatus-by-tayi-tibble-book-review/

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Reading updates

  • 5 April, 2022: Started reading
  • 5 April, 2022: Finished reading
  • 5 April, 2022: Reviewed