Skip to product information
1 of 1

What Small Sound

Publisher:

Regular price $22.00
Regular price $22.00 Sale price $22.00
Sold out
With unwavering tenderness and ferocity, Bell examines the perils and peculiarities of womanhood, motherhood, and our difficult, shared humanity.
  • 09 May 2023
View Product Details
Francesca Bell’s second collection of poems, What Small Sound, interrogates what it means to be a mother in a country where there are five times as many guns as children; female in a country where a woman is raped every two minutes; and citizen of a world teeming with iniquities and peril. In poems rich in metaphor and music and unflinching in their gaze, Bell offers us an exacting view of the audiologist’s booth and the locked ward as she grapples with the gradual loss of her own hearing and the mental illness spreading its dark wings over her family. This is a book of plentiful sorrows but also of small and sturdy comforts, a book that chronicles the private, lonely life of the body as well as its tender generosities. What Small Sound wrestles with some of the broadest, most complicated issues of our time and also with the most fundamental issue of all: love. How it shelters and anchors us. How it breaks us and, ultimately, how it pieces us back together.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $22.00
Pages: 96
Publisher: Red Hen Press
Imprint: Red Hen Press
Publication Date: 09 May 2023
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781636280790
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: POETRY / Women Authors, POETRY / American / General, POETRY / Subjects & Themes / Places
REVIEWS Icon
"A moving and musical set of poetic works." —Kirkus Reviews (starred)


"Between grief and relief, Francesca Bell's poems don't pause, they flow — like a warm bath, and someone quietly bringing a candle; then a cold shower, and the body awakened to spring." —Lúcia Leão, RHINO Poetry


"Many of these poems use wordplay between the title and the themes which are unpacked while reading and rereading each one. The stark contrasts between the topic initially hinted at in the title and what the poem’s subject actually is, heightens the tensions between each piece. Those silent spaces act as meditations whispered to the reader, and to the speaker as they both reciprocally ruminate on domestic life and expectations." —Shannon Vare Christine, Caesura Literary


"Francesca Bell (Bright Stain) writes poems that chime like the bell of her own name: bright but resonant, sharp but familiar, lush and likely to echo long after its initial strike. What Small Sound is Bell's second collection, and it brings together a haunting yet beautiful set of poems centered on the losses—or potential for them—that encircle her... Despite these losses, and the fear and heaviness that accompany them, Bell writes poems that insist pain is only one part of every story." —Sara Beth West, Shelf Awareness


Ultimately, What Small Sound  entreats us to value the terror, sorrow, and hardship in life as much as its moments of beauty and love and sensuousness. As readers, the poet's appeal to us is easier to accept, and makes more sense because she leads by example: "Oh world," Bell sings plaintively in "After the Hearing Test," "leave me slowly. / Let me dally over each diminishing return." — Sarah Kain Gutowski, Colorado State University Center for Literary Publishing


"What Small Sound... is an exploration of life, death, and love, and of the myriad ways these essential elements of human existence intersect and define each other... These poems seek to bring all that's lost and unspoken into the light, so that we might connect with it, with the world, and, maybe, in brief and unexpected moments, with each other." —Vivian Wagner, Pedestal Magazine


"Powerful and full of emotion, with themes that will engage readers from many different audiences." —Sarah Michaelis, Library Journal