Marcella Prokop is an award-winning writer and educator whose experiences as a Colombian-American inform her teaching and writing. As an educator, she centers diasporic voices and promotes culturally sustaining, anti-racist storytelling practices. Marcella’s work addresses dualities, binaries, and the impact of US imperialism on marginalized people and places. She holds a BA in Journalism, an MFA in Creative Nonfiction, and is pursuing a PhD in English. In addition to her literary work, Marcella runs an apiary and cidery with her partner. She lives on the ancestral and contemporary homelands of the Oceti Sakowin in the Upper Midwest, and also online at marcellaprokop.com.
Pan de Alma is a celebration of ancestry, identity, and the spiritual communion between place and self. Each poem is both an offering and a revelation, grounded in Prokop’s Colombia inheritance. “Bursting with impermanence” and clarity of vision from “the chipped bowls / from abuelita’s kitchen” or staring into “Omayra’s eyes,” which bear “the vacuum of collapsed stars / and Colombia’s shifting soil.” These lines, like so many, echo with generations of sacrifice and quiet persistence. What emerges is a reckoning and reverent embrace of “the in-between of existence, / the hyphen, the middle” that is “both victory and loss.” It’s this liminality that becomes Prokop’s most compelling element, as she writes “a communion of the US and Colombia” in glowing, spiritual language that is at once intimate and political. Pan de Alma is a vessel filled with memory, faith, and hard-won love.
— Ruben Quesada, author of Brutal Companion and editor of Latinx Poetics: Essays on the Art of Poetry
The poems in Marcella Prokop's debut chapbook, Pan de Alma are full of hunger: Hunger for mondongo, guanabana, pan de queso; hunger for truth, for justice, for a lens trained on the kaleidoscope of images that unfurl on every page; Hunger to nourish, hunger to feed, hunger to provide the reader with just the sustenance they need to come away full.
— Caridad Moro-Gronlier, Poet Laureate of Miami-Dade County and author of Tortillera
In Pan de Alma, Marcella Prokop interrogates how spirit tethers not only to body but to place. In these poems, the hyphenated identity offers “victory and loss,” “promise and purgatory,” and also a visceral sharpening of the senses. Prokop’s Colombia haunts; her questions and imagery persisting long after the last page.
— Violeta Garcia-Mendoza, author of Songs for the Land-Bound