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Carolina Ebeid. Graywolf, $17 trade paper (112p) ISBN 978-1-64445-377-3

Divided into four sections, the meditative sophomore volume from Ebeid (You Ask Me to Talk About the Interior) draws from the heritages of her Palestinian father and Cuban mother. In “Ghazal over Waves,” the repeated word wave captures the rhythm and motions of displacement, “North we go. North by fishing boat, by plane, by truck, by hot-air balloon. Look down at the waves./ Blue-violet North of shorter wavelengths, shorter attention spans—call out, call out and wave.” The entries weave memory, voices, places, and languages (Arabic, English, and Spanish) in spare lines that reflect on expression, art, and family history. “She Got Love: A Circle of Spells for Ana Mendieta” evokes the eponymous Cuban American artist in a poem comprised of lines arranged in circles, while “Autochthonous Silueta” begins, “The camera records Ana Mendieta kneeling/ beside her earth-body sculpture, concave dug-/ out of her self, hollow suspicion of a person.” It adds up to a memorable and skillful excavation of identity and inheritance. (Mar.)