Publisher's Synopsis
I Sew Myself Into the Womb of Soil is a fearless and fiercely original work of poetry that delves deep into the inner cosmos of the human psyche. Written in free verse, this collection is a visceral journey through selfhood, sorrow, rebellion, transcendence, and truth. With language both raw and poetic, the author strips bare the layers of identity, society, and perception - confronting the reader with uncomfortable questions and intimate revelations.
Each poem in this collection resonates like a psychological excavation - unearthing contradictions, critiquing cultural myths, and exposing the fragile boundaries between love and loss, mind and body, illusion and reality. With lyrical intensity, the poet explores what it means to exist in a world where beauty is commodified, truth is manipulated, and the soul longs to return to nature's embrace.
From existential despair to spiritual resilience, from erotic mysticism to socio-political critique, the book spans an astonishing range of thought and emotion. It challenges traditional structures - both literary and societal - and instead offers a rich, nonlinear, and layered experience that reflects the chaos and clarity of modern existence.
For readers of Franz Kafka, Rumi, Allen Ginsberg, or Sylvia Plath - or for anyone drawn to the unapologetic introspection of contemporary poetry - I Sew Myself Into the Womb of Soil is a compelling, soul-stirring work that refuses to conform and dares to feel.