In the quiet thought of this book, there is a powerful story about what will never come back. Those lost can be caught only by memory. Trethewey's prose captures memories with poetic precision
Trethewey wrote an unforgettable book, looking at tremendous destruction through calm and poetic eyes
A sincere, honest, humanitarian, "Beyond Katrina" should be one of the essential books of Katrina.
Beyond Hurricane Katrina: Meditation on the Mexican Gulf coast of Mississippi is more about sociological and psychological impacts of the storm against the coast and its people, especially North Gulfport, than its physical damage. However, it rarely includes generalization. . . . This book is a powerful and sometimes painful book that allows the reader to feel comfortable memories no matter where the reader lives.
Outside of Katrina, the public and personal influences of the tragedy are examined from the standpoint of independently authorized writers to undertake such a challenging and challenging project. She brought insider's knowledge and deep emotions to this place and its culture, and also brought careful separation of foreigners. On a larger scale, this book is full of memories and the feeling that the past can only exist as destruction. This book provides continuous evidence that Natasha Trethewey is one of our most essential poets and conveys to us that she is the prose author's first order.
Together with Bellocq's Ophelia and Earth Guard, Natasha Tresway showed an incredibly urgent sympathy for events and events essential in the United States, ignored. Outside of Katrina, this delicate vision and compassion extends the inexplicable aspects of past, present and future of the tragedy of this country. By clarifying personal, historical, political, and geographical experience patterns, the meaning of Hurricane Katrina to the Gulf and the people, and what that means, what it means, It is an interpretation and an important emotional experience. as a whole
Another writer of the Mississippi Bay that influenced my research was the American poet prize winner Natasha Tresway. In "Beyond Katrina: Meditation in the Mississippi Bay", Trethewey looked at strengthening the coastline of the Mississippi Bay by the storm like Hayden. Trethewey also explores memory and cultural geography, with a focus on the negative memories of Beauvoir of her family. Trethewey's work is the first example of memory that I discovered that Popov's dominant story was overturned.
Beyond Hurricane Katrina: Meditation on the Mexican Gulf coast of Mississippi is more about sociological and psychological impacts of the storm against the coast and its people, especially North Gulfport, than its physical damage. However, it rarely includes generalization. . . . This book is a powerful and sometimes painful book that allows the reader to feel comfortable memories no matter where the reader lives. Outside of Katrina, the public and personal influences of the tragedy are examined from the standpoint of independently authorized writers to undertake such a challenging and challenging project. She brought insider's knowledge and deep emotions to this place and its culture, and also brought careful separation of foreigners. On a larger scale, this book is full of memories and the feeling that the past can only exist as destruction. This book provides continuous evidence that Natasha Trethewey is one of our most essential poets and conveys to us that she is the prose author's first order.
Trethewey remembers these words when she surveys the storm scenery that he once called home. Like a talented memoir, she proved himself with Beyond Katrina: meditation in the Mississippi Bay, she confronted and faced past and present demons. The result is a remarkable and remarkable book like Trethewey's poem. "When we begin to imagine the future where the past no longer exists, we will see the destruction," Trethewey wrote. The ruins and destruction of Trethewey reference transcends eroded beaches and ancient rooted oaks lined along the Gulf. The quest for depth and sensitivity of her emotions is Katrina's spiritual loss to her family and the community where they live.