"Raíces, Relics, and Other Ghosts is a lamentation for the loss of
familial connection, and with it, the people and the history that are the seeds
of identity. Using the life cycle of flora—plants, trees, and the complex
network of roots that tie them to their native soil—this collection explores
displacement. To lose a home. To lose a language. To lose connection to one’s
own ancestors. To lose a grounding sense of self. This litany of losses,
mourned in Raíces, Relics, and Other Ghosts, creates a
constant sense of absence. Explored visually, metaphorically, and
linguistically, with Spanish and English entwining like vines, this collection
is restorative, a reclamation of personal and cultural history that has been
denied."
-Jenny
Irish, author of Lupine
"Raíces, Relics, and Other Ghosts is an
ecosystem where every poem becomes an organism working together to grow back a
buried history. A history sprouting life into the hands of an “orphan Boricua”
searching for belonging in Puerto Rico’s cornfields, rebellious orchids, guavas and plátanos, as well as in the stories of loved
ones no longer here. This is a collection of poetry that declares, “Our
histories and legacies/ could be groves instead of the tools chopping them down.” And before understanding the self, S. Salazar confronts and grieves lost
land, language, and family ghosts, because “How I handle the past/ is how I’ll
heal.” Witness how roots dig deep beneath the soil the sun cannot reach, working its way toward the top of a mountain with a voice demanding to be heard
and seen despite what is lost."
-Karla Cordero,
author of How to Pull Apart the Earth