Moon Of Many Petals
Rinne, Cindy
Sold by Collectorsemall, Rialto, CA, U.S.A.
AbeBooks Seller since May 19, 2020
Used - Soft cover
Condition: Used - Fine
Ships within U.S.A.
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSold by Collectorsemall, Rialto, CA, U.S.A.
AbeBooks Seller since May 19, 2020
Condition: Used - Fine
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketAncient Arts
That day my father,There’s a tapestry on the book cover, made of abstract patterns of blue—also embedding a bird and a dark figurine. This last must be female by the contour of her hairdo, by the shape of the dress she wears under a cape. She bends slightly, in a pose we might decode as pensive. She has things in her mind, therefore things to say.
She comes back on the title page. She begins the five chapters composing Cindy Rinne’s new novel in verse. Each appearance is different, and a different patchwork surrounds the shadow-girl. Once, her body is all made of butterflies. Then she grows golden wings parsed with turquoise stones. Later, enrobed in tender lilac, she looks the other way. Sometimes she haunts the foreground, sometimes she disappears in the distance. Her shape always overlaps a list of names, like those found on memorial walls. These are printed on a screen inside the Manzanar Visitor Center. As they part the chapters—forming the backdrop of Natsumi’s metamorphoses—they shift in size. They come close, wishing to be individually spelled, learned, recalled. They recede exposing their vertiginous quantity, their frightening infinity.
Manzanar? If you just flip the pages, jewel tones, soft textures, dancing shapes of the images constellating the text—the author’s own fiber art—suggests whimsicality, maybe a children story. True, as this narrative of evacuation, exile, confinement, prison, is re-told by the lightest of testimonies—an embryo, then fetus. An un-born baby. The tale is related ab utero, a womb its vantage point.
When Mio is forced on a bus together with her husband, Takumi, she is a few weeks pregnant. We have already met the presence tugged inside her. “She” has told us about her parents’ home in Morro Bay, surrounded by the liveliness of the sea. She has spoken of many other things, travelling back in time and as far as Japan, visiting the grandmother whose namesake she’ll be, once borne—another Natsumi, still in Sendai, yet so close to the cluster of cells busy making themselves, they are one. Just as this bundle of tireless growth is one with Mio. The un-born girl experiences her mother’s distress, fear, disorientation, and loneliness.
Ash, wind, dust, make life in the Manzanar barracks harsh, even more for a pregnant body. Only a thin curtain splits the miniature room where two families coexist. Intimacy is erased and so is the language. The internees are prohibited of speaking Japanese. But the fetus witnesses Mother’s revolt, as Mio can’t resist lullabying the fruit of her womb with traditional songs, or reciting an ancient play Grandma loved.
Paper shades at the window can’t hide the barbed wire surrounding the flats—the wide, barren plain containing the camp. The sight loads Mio with anguish, with a sense of suffocation Natsumi can feel, though she is still entirely free. Actually she is freedom itself, as the microcosm of the womb coincides with the macrocosm. She is swallow, butterfly, flower, sakura petal. She is simultaneously past, present, future, whispering in her ancestors’ ears, carrying messages back and forth, sewing what has been with what will be, annihilating distances. Body/souls in the making have such awesome flexibility.
The complete review by Toti O'Brien appears in the April issue of Gravel Magazine. You can read the rest of this thoughtful review at https://www.gravelmag.com/toti-obrien.html
Cindy Rinne is from the Midwest, but currently lives, creates art and writes in San Bernardino, CA. Cindy won an Honorable Mention in The Rattling Wall Poetry Contest. She was the Featured Poet for The Village Poets of Sunland-Tujunga. Cindy has given readings in Claremont, Pasadena, Riverside, Pomona, Flintridge and China Town. She has hosted poetry events combining art, music and poetry in Redlands and Pomona. Cindy teaches Visual Poetry Workshops. As a guest lecturer, she has presented Assembled Stories-Collaboration for the CSUSB MFA Program. Her work appeared or is forthcoming in East Jasmine Review, Linden Ave. Literary Journal, The Gap Toothed Madness, A Narrow Fellow, shuf poetry, Poetry Quarterly, The Prose-Poem Project, Tin Cannon, the Wild Lemon Project, The Sand Canyon Review, Inlandia, A Literary Journal and Phantom Seed. She is published member of Poets on Site based in Pasadena. Cindy has been a featured artist for Poets on Site in the Living Room Gallery, Pasadena. Her poem for the Pacific Asia Museum Poetry Tour is included in the Poets on Site MUSE Award in Media and Technology.
POETRY PUBLISHED
"Listen to the Codex" Native Blossoms Chapbook, 2017
“Breathe in Daisy, Breathe out Stones,” FutureCycle Press, 2017
“Quiet Lantern,” Novel in Verse, Turning Point Imprint of WordTech Communications, 2016
“Spider With Wings,” Chapbook, Jamii Publishing, 2015
“Speaking Through Sediment,” Cindy Rinne & Michael Cooper, ELJ Publications, 2015
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
Payment can be check (U.S. only), money order or U.S. Dollars.
I also accept ABECommerce which allows you to pay by credit card.
Shipping costs are based on books weighing 2.2 LB, or 1 KG. If your book order is heavy or oversized, we may contact you to let you know extra shipping is required.
| Order quantity | 5 to 14 business days | 3 to 6 business days |
|---|---|---|
| First item | US$ 6.50 | US$ 15.00 |
Delivery times are set by sellers and vary by carrier and location. Orders passing through Customs may face delays and buyers are responsible for any associated duties or fees. Sellers may contact you regarding additional charges to cover any increased costs to ship your items.