The River Is Rising by Patricia Jabbeh Wesley
The River Is Rising by Patricia Jabbeh Wesley
Silver Concho Poetry Series edited by Pamela Uschuk and William Pitt Root
ISBN 978-1-950413-59-1
9 x 6 softcover, 124 pages
First published in 2007 by Autumn House Press
An Excerpt From the Introduction by co-editor Pamela Uschuk
I am deeply grateful that The River Is Rising, the seminal book of poems by Liberian poet Patricia Jabbeh Wesley, the foremost African woman poet writing today, is being reissued. Patricia Jabbeh Wesley and her family fled their native country of Liberia after suffering tremendous privations and violence during the bloody Liberian Civil War in 1991. These poems are more than the story of one woman who carried her children over dead bodies, walking dozens of miles from Monrovia, through dirty streams amidst government soldier and rebel killing fields, fleeing bombs and constant gun battles, who with her husband and small children were forced to survive on roots in a displacement camp outside Monrovia, where they witnessed every kind of crime against women. Jabbeh Wesley did more than survive. She helped other women. She wrote.
Praise for The River Is Rising
Patricia Jabbeh Wesley's The River Is Rising is both brilliant and heartbreaking. Survivor of the brutal Liberian Civil War, Wesley bears witness to a life she lost to that war, and to what it means to be a refugee who has remade herself.... "To every war," she says simply, "there are no winners." I am in awe of these beautiful, necessary poems, and the glory and largesse of Wesley s vision. —Cynthia Hogue
Patricia Jabbeh Wesley's poetry is heartfelt, wise, and alive... One senses in her that rare combination of someone who has been deeply schooled in both literature and life, and who has integrated those two into a deeply felt and shrewd worldview. —Stuart Dybek