Reviews

Museum of Accidents by Rachel Zucker

books4days's review against another edition

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2.0

Not my cup of tea. I picked up this book after hearing the author read her poem "Don't Say Anything Beautiful Kiss Me," which is a cool rebuttal to the idea of a blazon (e.g., Shakespeare's Sonnet 130), but I wasn't wild about any of the other poems in this volume. It's mostly a compilation of ideas, thoughts, and feelings on motherhood, which isn't what I was expecting.

sam8834's review against another edition

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4.0

These poems center the domestic life and take up as much space as they want to, which makes me happy.

ostadean's review against another edition

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1.0

I got bored and couldn't finish it.

hannahjoyeux's review against another edition

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2.0

some lines ("what if you wanted me the way you want coffee?") made reading this worth it, but over all it was just alright.

hannahlee's review against another edition

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5.0

The best and most engaging contemporary collection of poetry I have read in a long time. Zucker's voice is raw, intense, and feels like a friend pouring their thoughts and feelings directly into your head. Her poems - often in the form of long, sprawling, stream-of-consciousness lines - are a masterwork of both control and authenticity. A poet for our age.

pyrrhicspondee's review

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3.0

Like a 3.5. Some of these poems I LOVED. I really fell into the long poems and found them incredibly enjoyable. But also some of them were not . . . poems? I have no idea what makes a poem officially. But to me it's something about associative leaps (thanks Robert Bly). And many of these poems don't seem to leap anywhere.

coamyp's review

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4.0

These poems kind of make me ache and marvel at how exactly she gets the motherhood experience.
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