The Book Eaters

Carolina Hotchandani's debut collection THE BOOK EATERS is a study in shifting cultural and personal identities as well as in belonging--to our bodies, our memories, our stories, ourselves, our families, our cultures.

In Carolina Hotchandani's debut THE BOOK EATERS, the poet's desire for agency over her life's narrative is counterbalanced by her awareness that poetry is written precisely when life wrests control from us. This book, conceived in loss, examines shifts in identity due to Partition, immigration, illness, and birth. As roles evolve and dissolve, the poet witnesses the decay of language, artifacts, and history, yet these erasures are also generative: they beget poetic creation. THE BOOK EATERS is a study in belonging as well--to our bodies, our memories, our stories, ourselves, our families, our cultures. Hotchandani's poems interrogate what it means to be full or empty (of words, of the past, of another human being); they illuminate our inextricability from our creaturehood. Even as they explore unraveling--through the metaphor of insects that devour the very pages we produce--these poems are tightly woven into an exquisitely crafted, cohesive collection.

"Carolina Hotchandani's THE BOOK EATERS is simply a gorgeous book of poems. The poems' subjects are varied and deftly handled: a father's aphasia, diaspora, new motherhood, language, memory, the natural world. But it's the language in these poems that most interests and intrigues me--a reflective language that casts and recasts a thinking mind, a mind that is a highway through life's travails. After all our metaphor-making is over, what's left is a life lived, THE BOOK EATERS seems to be saying, as the penultimate poem notes: 'Now that the drama is gone from her story, / the trees will stand for trees alone.'"--Victoria Chang

"Carolina Hotchandani's debut, THE BOOK EATERS, is both a personal meditation on loss and a philosophical inquiry into how metaphor shepherds us through life-changing transformations: death, birth, the making of art that can control neither journey though it speaks to both. The speaker of these poems tries to insert herself into her father's failing memory in a beautifully desperate and impossible effort not to be erased. She reads aloud to her unborn child, hoping both mother and child can enter the 'current / of another's voice.' In a striking analogy, silverfish make their way through books, which are literally and metaphorically nourishing. Acts of identity theft both real and imagined catalyze the inquiries into self and other that animate this collection in both personal and political ways: 'Those holes will tell my story too.' The words 'deliver' and 'labor' weave through the poems, lifting the maternal into the artistic, the intimate into the universal."--Catherine Barnett

"Carolina Hotchandani's THE BOOK EATERS is that rare debut: one that satisfies the heart and head in equal measures. In these subtle, lyric poems, Hotchandani explores the loss of a father's language and memory, a loss complicated by Partition, emigration, and the body's own failures, even by narrative itself, which threatens to revise and reimagine the past, even as the writing of these poems helps revive the speaker's memories. These poems understand that language and culture offer us a paradox: we may be contained and constrained within the languages we inherit and lose, yet we also become authors of our identities through our love of story, extending our lines of memory and culture so that all the selves we are and have been tangle together. In the end, where does a self truly end and narrative fantasy begin? 'I don't know/ how to part the story from the person and keep the person, ' Hotchandani writes, but these are poems that--miraculously--preserve both."--Paisley Rekdal

Poetry. Family & Relationships. Asian & Asian American Studies. Latinx Studies. Women's Studies.

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97 pages

Average rating: 6.8

76 RATINGS

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Community Reviews

LMahoney
Jan 26, 2024
8/10 stars
very creative story! really enjoyed it and loved the two timelines

not 5 stars because it was a little slow; also the audiobook narrator didnt use different voices so sometimes I didn't know who was speaking but otherwise a really good book.
Kirstensviews
Jul 18, 2023
8/10 stars
Victoria’s choice
SprinkleofSassy
Jun 29, 2023
6/10 stars
More like 6.5 stars.
ProfHemp
Mar 16, 2023
7/10 stars
Worldbuilding: 4/10 Probably the weakest element. I love fantasy across many subgenres, but the juxtaposition of a modern setting with human-like creatures that just...eat books... felt a tad silly. Especially when the book has a somewhat dark tone.  Characters: 6/10 The main character was complex and well developed, but most of the side characters fell flat for me. I was really hoping to find out more about her son and be able to see how each mind he ate changed his personality. Plot: 8/10 Started off heavy, but it caught my interest during the second or third flashback. There were a couple fun twists towards the end. Prose: 8/10 The writing felt fresh and I loved how she described what different books and magazines tasted like. Enjoyment:7/10 The book explored some high-level concepts and made me think about the nature of love and how it's inherently selfish and selfless.  Average: 6.6
Vicky73
Feb 16, 2023
3/10 stars
Very well written .

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