In Kara Candito's prize-winning debut collection a "garish/human theatre" comes to life against richly textured geographic and psychic landscapes. These poems are high-speed meditations on a world where Walter Benjamin meets the "glitzy chain-link of Chanel scarves" and Puccini's "Tosca "meets the din of the Times Square subway station. Ferociously witty and intensely lyrical, "Taste of Cherry" speaks to us in a language that is simultaneously private and public, sensual and cerebral.
Kara Candito's work has appeared in such journals as Gulf Coast, Blackbird, Prairie Schooner, Nimrod, Best New Poets 2007, and the Florida Review. She has been awarded scholarships from the Bread Loaf Writer's Conference and the Florida State University College of Arts and Sciences Foundation. She has an MFA from the University of Maryland and is currently a PhD candidate and instructor at Florida State University.
Acknowledgments
One
Self-Portrait with an Ice Pick
La Bufera: Our Last Trip to Sicily
Floristic Elegy for the Year I Lived with You in Coconut Grove
Notes for a Novice Flâneur
Postcard: I've Been Meaning to Write--
Egypt Journal: The Poet's Condition
Egypt Journal: Christmas at the Great Pyramid
Two. Portraits
Carnivale, 1934
Epic Poem Concerning the Poet's Coming of Age as Attis
Gilead Red
Girl in the Grass
Three
Taste of Cherry
Barely Legal: Upon Finding My Father's Porn
A Necessary Fiction
He Was Only Half as Beautiful
California
Sleeping with René Magritte
Polarity
Strange Zippers: A Poem in Which the Heroine _______
The Fitting
On the Occasion of Our Argument During a 1 Best Power Ballads Countdown
Last Happiness
Notes