Note to Readers

    by Poetry Editor, Babitha Marina Justin

    At Usawa, we value every little thing we see and read in a poem. Sometimes we observe, with a child’s eye, the thematic spectrums and the universes they unfold in a grain of  sand. Sometimes, the poetic words fly without boundaries, sometimes they express subtle and unexpected feelings and twisted truths experienced from the guts. Some poets persist on “a rhythmic tearing apart of rules” and they long to “To bleed sin/To drip pleasure.”. At times, they observe their gustatory entropy where “you’re hungry but your stomach is so full/you cannot eat.”

    Through their taste buds, the poets speak directly to you, humble and hopeful, at times, recounting the “antness of their hurry/blind vultures of their hunger/to gulp down order/ like distorting anxieties/our lives pose”
     
    In this section, the tongue becomes the Holy Land where the desiring, erring organ is bestowed with a spiritual significance, where the lump of flesh becomes a swathe of mindscape toting memories and loss. The poems featured here are written with an open heart, recognizing our sorrows and suffering, eventually bringing in hope and healing. In this issue, we exalt in the algorithms of hope and healing explored through the senses, obviously to whet our appetites.

    Subscribe to our newsletter To Recieve Updates

      The Latest
      • Note to Readers by Book Review Editor, Ankush Banerjee

        Welcome to the Reviews Section of Usawa’s December 2024 Issue, based around the

      • Note to Readers by Translations Editor, Sonakshi Srivastava

        It is always a glittering pleasure to read submissions for the Translations

      • Note to Readers by Poetry Editor, Babitha Marina Justin Copy

        At Usawa, we value every little thing we see and read in a poem

      • HERE I AM by Bakula Nayak

        Welcome to Issue 12 of the Usawa Literary Review

      You May Also Like
      • The City by Vrinda Baliga

        She was a year old when her parents left for the City Varsha, her parents had

      • Smita Sahay Editor-in-Chief

        As we welcome you to the latest issue of Usawa, we invite you to meditate

      • Listening In and Other Poems By Geetha Ravichandran

        If only she had been allowed to complete her story A voice from behind

      • Two Poems By Shamayita Sen

        What I’ll miss most about home as I leave Kolkata this spring: A pair