'As Terrance Hayes recast the American sonnet for the 21st Century, Leo Boix captures the spirit of Argentina in this <b>vibrant, formally adroit and compelling sequence.</b> <i>Southernmost </i>is a <b>vivid</b>, <b>transhemispheric memoir of queer love, loss and migration </b>that casts its <b>dazzling, occasionally Gothic spell</b> on wherever it alights, from the shores of the South Atlantic to the English Channel. <b>Generous, vulnerable and vivifying</b>’

Karen McCarthy Woolf

'Leo Boix's cartographic sonnets <b>give queer form to interlocking personal and social histories, making music of loss and displacement.</b> Their diasporic intellect summons "Latin America's heart" with equal parts rigour and play in a poetics <b>as sinuous and expansive as the ocean</b> between us’

Urayoán Noel

'In this <b>thrilling collection of sonnets</b>, Leo Boix <b>maps a personal geography out of dynamic encounters between the Old World and the New</b>, between sweeping landscapes and miniature, as he <b>brilliantly captures the fluctuations of history</b>, the natural world and the inner self. A splendid testament to Alexander von Humboldt’s own scientific vision and boundless curiosity, and his theory that everything is interconnected, everything interacts, <b>every existence is part of a joyous and fragile totality</b>'

Chloe Aridjis

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<b>Compelling…</b> [with] observational detail, which is resplendent throughout… <i>Sourthernmost</i> is unflinching in its attention to Argentine history… The poems…are <b>beautiful and unsentimental</b>

Daily Telegraph

Boix smooths copious amounts of lived experience into<b> taut, melodic poems</b> that are thick with place

Guardian

[Boix’s] command of poetic English and a rich vocabulary are<b> impressive… </b>All in all, <i>Southernmost: Sonnets</i> is as disarming a collection as an album of butterflies

Morning Star

'Vivid ... A memoir of queer love, loss and migration … dazzling’ Karen McCarthy Woolf, author of Top Doll

'It all happened a long time ago, no one now remembers this story
let me tell you how it all happened, how we turned unholy.'

In Southernmost, Leo Boix takes us on a spellbinding voyage through time and imagination, from the Argentina of his birth – ‘the end of the world, the antipode’ – to a new life in England.

Unearthing an old grief, the poet embarks on a glittering, encyclopaedic exploration of his own past and the Latin America he left behind: a continent haunted by the Europeans who once fixed their telescopes on its shores.

Southernmost reveals truths hidden in plain sight: colonialism’s violent legacies; dissidents disappeared by the junta; a young mother’s mysterious decline; the clarifying sexuality of a boy whose father can’t bear to acknowledge it. At the same time, it tells a story – as sonnets have often done – about love, through Boix’s intimate and original evocation of gay marriage. Restlessly intelligent, intoxicated by Latin America’s landscapes and rich folklore, this virtuosic net of sonnets offers a glimpse of our world’s interconnecting threads.

'In this thrilling collection of sonnets, Leo Boix maps a personal geography out of dynamic encounters between the Old World and the New' Chloe Aridjis, author of Sea Monsters

'As sinuous and expansive as the ocean between us’ Urayoán Noel, author of Transversal

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781784745851
Publisert
2025-06-05
Utgiver
Vintage Publishing; Chatto & Windus
Vekt
157 gr
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
137 mm
Dybde
12 mm
Aldersnivå
01, G, U, P, 01, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
144

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Leo Boix is a Latinx bilingual poet, translator and educator born in Argentina who lives in the UK. His first collection, Ballad of a Happy Immigrant (2021), was a Poetry Book Society Wild Card Choice. Boix is the co-director of Un Nuevo Sol, a national scheme to nurture new Latinx writers in the UK. He is the editor of Hemisferio Cuir: An Anthology of Young Queer Latin American Poetry (2025). He was the recipient of the Bart Wolffe Poetry Prize 2018, the Keats-Shelley Prize 2019 and a PEN Award in 2021.