The Treasures That Prevail
3.5/5
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About this ebook
The Treasures That Prevail is about climate change and its effects on Miami; the poems in this collection confront the ills of modern society in general, mourn both public and personal losses, and predict the difficulties of a post-modern life in a flooded, Atlantis-like lost city. The narrators are two unnamed women, married with a teenage daughter and a teenage son, who live in a part of Miami that will be underwater unless action is taken. The Treasures That Prevail is a parable about what could happen to any of our low-lying coastal cities if we don’t start to make changes now.
Jen Karetnick
Jen Karetnick is a Miami-based writer, poet, dining critic, and educator. She is the author or coauthor of sixteen books, including the award-winning cookbook Mango and The 500 Hidden Secrets of Miami. Her latest book of poetry, The Treasures That Prevail, was a finalist for the Poetry Society of Virginia Book Prize. She is co-founder/co-editor of the literary journal, SWWIM Every Day. Her freelance work has appeared in various outlets including TheAtlantic.com, GoodHousekeeping.com, Guernica, Miami Herald, Southern Living, Today.com, and USA Today. Find her on Twitter @Kavetchnik and on Instagram and Facebook @JenKaretnick.
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Reviews for The Treasures That Prevail
7 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is a quirky little book of poetry. Not only does it play with very difficult-to-pull-off rhyme schemes (I think I saw a ghazal, a sonnet, a sestina, and a villanelle, but don't quote me on that), each poem utilizes at least one "found" poetic verse. The result is that the Miami Karetnick depicts--one whose shores are buried by the wash of tidal floods (a result of global warming)--is construed through the happenstance of the detritus that bobs along the surface, both meaningnessly and meaningfully.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This book is very powerful, thought provoking. I didn'the expect it to be a very dark book because I didn't read the synopsis fully, so that i don't ruin or spoil the poems for myself. I really enjoyed it, but at some point in there made me cringe. It's very discriptive, but in a very short sense of way. I'm going to read it again to make all my favorite parts of it because it's a very honest, and I really like that. I felt a lot of power in every word. That is absolutely fantastic, and I love the social aspects in here because they all make sense even though they're pretty dark. I love this, and I hope I get to read more books or poems like this in the future. Highly recommend for anyone that's not afraid of the dark truths that are usually hidden.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5It was a witty book of poetry that was hard to put down. I enjoyed reading the flow of beautiful ideas.I would recommend it to poetry enthusiasts.