“In this book, Marjorie Silverman puts grief under the microscope to examine how it excoriates and how it prepares us for the hope of ‘revitalizing this toxic garden.’ Driven by a search for mourning that is both good and just, (Un)spoken proclaims the holiness of survival as revolution, the self that speaks and speaks again.”~ Tanis MacDonald, winner of the Bliss Carman Poetry Prize
“Marjorie Silverman’s (Un)spoken will capture avid poetry fans and total rookies alike with its powerful, resonant, defiant, and clear responses to the bodily coercions of our culture. Silverman has–with great generosity–guided the reader through the well-tended pain, scars, and salves of gender norms, sexual violence, and emotionally-loaded eating, all via a specifically Jewish voice. Her excellent use of alliteration, repetition, dialogue, strikethroughs, and experimental form do not for a second muddy the immediacy and resolve of these succinct poems; these poems are small, sharp, polished gems. Any reader who is interested in honest and tough conversations about mental health and oppression will be very glad that these words were, in fact, spoken!”~ Lucas Crawford, author of Sideshow Concessions, The High Line Scavenger Hunt, Belated Bris of the Brainsick, and Muster Points
“Marjorie Silverman’s (Un)spoken is an unflinching account of survival, immediate and inter-generational. Equally elegant and feisty, lucid and dream-like, her poems hold the weight, the wait, the want, and the haunt. There is deep attention at work here and it is passionate and affirming. Silverman gives us a collection of intimacy, of rituals, fused with affirming sustenance. This is a powerful book of the mouth–lippy, fierce, and full.”~ Sandra Ridley, award-winning poet, instructor and editor