“Resplendent in formal range, in image-richness, in music, empathy, and wisdom, the poems of BLACK DOVE / PALOMA NEGRA offer us a landscape of dissociation, of fragmentation in selfhood and in art. To fracture, these poems demonstrate, can be a wildly creative defense of the traumatized self. “We’ve all cracked/in our own ways,” Leslie Contreras Schwartz writes, and goes on to show us how, in a choir of voices—missing children, victims of sex trafficking, sex workers, border detainees, family members, and the always-hungering self. To experience this collection is to encounter the “wild self choired, corralled in a thought box,” where “all of us together/can make a great sound,” a definition of lyric poetry if there ever was one. As a fellow traveler, I am grateful for Schwartz’s vision—that to name the break, to delineate the parts, is to bring forth a singular, sacred wholeness. BLACK DOVE / PALOMA NEGRA establishes an aesthetic of survival.”—DIANE SEUSS, AUTHOR OF PULITZER FINALIST, FOUR-LEGGED GIRL, AND STILL LIFE WITH TWO DEAD PEACOCKS AND A GIRL
“Leslie Contreras Schwartz’s BLACK DOVE / PALOMA NEGRA is a brave interrogation of self, and the split self, in an era that asks us to carry more than one identity with us at all times. Filled with wild horses, lost continents, alternating voices, and missing women this book asks the reader: How does one calm the voices of trauma to get through the day, a year, a life? At once troubling and filled with hope, these poems are hungry storms that will rock you awake, then help you salvage wood to build a boat, and sail you to shore.”—NATALIE SCENTERS-ZAPICO, LANNAN FELLOW AND AUTHOR OF LIMA: LIMÓN
Leslie Contreras Schwartz is a multi-genre writer, a 2021 Academy of American Poets Laureate Fellow, the 2019-2021 Houston Poet Laureate, and the author of the 2022 C&R Press Nonfiction Prize Winner From the Womb of Sky and Earth, a lyrical memoir. She is the author of five collections of poetry: Black Dove/Paloma Negra (FlowerSong Press, 2020), a finalist for the 2021 Best Book of Poetry from the Texas Institute of Letters; and Nightbloom & Cenote (St. Julian Press, 2018) a semi-finalist for the 2017 Tupelo Press Dorset Prize, judged by Ilya Kaminsky. Her work has appeared in Paris Review, AGNI, EPOCH, Missouri Review, Iowa Review, [PANK], Verse Daily, Pleiades, Gulf Coast, and Houston Noir (Akashic Books, 2019), and 2019 The Best Small Fiction anthology, among others. Recent work has been featured with the Academy of American Poets Poem-A-Day. She has collaborated or been commissioned for poetic projects with the City of Houston, the Houston Grand Opera, and The Moody Center of the Arts at Rice University.