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  1. Aug 18, 2017 · The New Yorker 's Carina del Valle Schorske introduces readers to the writings of Cuban poet Dulce María Loynaz in the latest installment of the magazine's Page-Turner section. Loynaz's poetry all but ceased when the Cuban Revolution began, when the author became an "internal exile."

  2. Loynaz published her first poems in La Nación in 1920. She traveled extensively including to Turkey , Syria , Libya , Palestine , and Egypt . Loynaz also visited Mexico in 1937 and various countries in South America from 1946 to 1947, and the Canary Islands in 1947 and 1951 where she as declared adoptive daughter.

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  4. Sep 8, 2015 · 4.34. 208 ratings57 reviews. In the first comprehensive selection and translation of Dulce María Loynaz's poetry, James O'Connor invites us to hear the haunting voice of Cuba's celebrated poet, whom the Nobel Laureate Juan Ramón Jiménez terms in his Foreword, "archaic and new...tender, weightless, rich in abandon."

    • (207)
    • Paperback
  5. Aug 16, 2017 · The Internal Exile of Dulce María Loynaz. By Carina del Valle Schorske. August 16, 2017. “Poetry is transit,” the Cuban poet Dulce María Loynaz wrote in a 1950 lecture on her own...

  6. She is best known for her poems, particularly Versos, 1920-1938, Ultimos Días de Una Casa (Last Days of a House, 1958) and her Poemas sin nombre (Nameless Poems, 1953), a collection of 124 prose poems, some only a sentence long, which she dedicated to her mother.

    • Ruth Behar
    • 1997
  7. Absolute Solitude: Selected Poems. Dulce Maria Loynaz. Steerforth Press, May 3, 2016 - Poetry - 240 pages. In the first comprehensive selection and translation of Dulce María...

  8. Chiaroscuro juxtapositions occur throughout her poems, many of which evoke minimalism and consist primarily of the play between light and dark, and oppositions such as wet and dry, flying and falling, and life and death. “¿Y esa luz? / — Es tu sombra” (And that light? / It’s your shadow) (lxxiii).

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