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Oh, this book. With gritty intimacy, cinematic poetics, and clear-eyed devotion, Paige Buffington transports us through memory and dream to a place where time might be told by the migration of cranes. Buffington explores not only what is home, but who is our home? Who leaves? Who returns? And how do we carry home with us wherever we are, marked forever by its wounds, its gifts, its landscapes, its heartbreaks, its language, its traditions, its love. So quietly, so surely, Halchita Red transported me.
-Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, author of The Unfolding and host of The Poetic Path
In Halchita Red, Buffington offers a text-or rather, a voice-a sepia light, a visceral reminder of what has survived with its beauty intact, despite what 400 years of colonization continues to attempt to disappear. Halchita Red acts as a reliquary of words and stories finding their way home, cinematically-expressed sentiments-simultaneously gorgeous and gritty-spinning a multi-generational Native narrative of loss, grief, heartbreak, hope, and beauty, reminding us that we should "repeat the words like cedar and meadow, cicada." Remember grandmother's spirited advice, "be careful, but keep going.
-David Anthony Martin, author of The Ground Nest, Founder and Editor Middle Creek Publishing & Audio
In these poems a reader can get lost, a process happily encouraged by Buffington's frequent use of second person pronouns. We are there. We taste the wind. We smell the sagebrush. We feel our fingers sticking to the table of a midnight diner. Buffington sucks us into this narrative and does not let us go.
-Marissa Harwood, Reviewer, Rocky Mountain Reader.
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