🚚 Free Worldwide Shipping on All Orders!Shop Now
Locomotive Cathedral (The Backwaters Prize in Poetry Honorable Mention
HomeStore

Locomotive Cathedral (The Backwaters Prize in Poetry Honorable Mention

Locomotive Cathedral (The Backwaters Prize in Poetry Honorable Mention

With wit and vulnerability, Brandel France de Bravo explores resilience in the face of climate change and a global pandemic, race, and the concept of a self, all while celebrating the power of breath as ā€œbaptism on repeat.ā€ Whether her inspiration is twelfth-century Buddhist mind-training slogans or the one-footed crow who visits her daily, France de Bravo mines the tension between the human desire for permanence and control, and life’s fluid, ungraspable nature. Poem by poem, essay by essay, she builds a temple to the perpetual motion of transformation, the wondrous churn of change and exchange that defines companionship, marriage, and ceding our place on Earth: ā€œnot dying, but molting.ā€


$8.06

Original: $26.86

-70%
Locomotive Cathedral (The Backwaters Prize in Poetry Honorable Mention—

$26.86

$8.06

Locomotive Cathedral (The Backwaters Prize in Poetry Honorable Mention

With wit and vulnerability, Brandel France de Bravo explores resilience in the face of climate change and a global pandemic, race, and the concept of a self, all while celebrating the power of breath as ā€œbaptism on repeat.ā€ Whether her inspiration is twelfth-century Buddhist mind-training slogans or the one-footed crow who visits her daily, France de Bravo mines the tension between the human desire for permanence and control, and life’s fluid, ungraspable nature. Poem by poem, essay by essay, she builds a temple to the perpetual motion of transformation, the wondrous churn of change and exchange that defines companionship, marriage, and ceding our place on Earth: ā€œnot dying, but molting.ā€


Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

With wit and vulnerability, Brandel France de Bravo explores resilience in the face of climate change and a global pandemic, race, and the concept of a self, all while celebrating the power of breath as ā€œbaptism on repeat.ā€ Whether her inspiration is twelfth-century Buddhist mind-training slogans or the one-footed crow who visits her daily, France de Bravo mines the tension between the human desire for permanence and control, and life’s fluid, ungraspable nature. Poem by poem, essay by essay, she builds a temple to the perpetual motion of transformation, the wondrous churn of change and exchange that defines companionship, marriage, and ceding our place on Earth: ā€œnot dying, but molting.ā€