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TAKE CARE

72 pages
Paperback, 21 x 14.8 cm
Published September 2021
ISBN 9781925818796

TAKE CARE

Eunice Andrada

Shortlisted for The Stella Prize

SHORTLISTED: The Stella Prize 2022
SHORTLISTED: NSW Premier’s Literary Awards 2022
SHORTLISTED: QLD Literary Awards – Judith Wright Calanthe Award 2022
LONGLISTED: ALS Gold Medal 2022

TAKE CARE explores what it means to survive within systems not designed for tenderness. Bound in personal testimony, the poems situate the act of rape within the machinery of imperialism, where human and non-human bodies, lands, and waters are violated to uphold colonial powers. Andrada explores the magnitude of rape culture in the everyday: from justice systems that dehumanise survivors, to exploitative care industries that deny Filipina workers their agency, to nationalist monuments that erase the sexual violence of war.

Unsparing in their interrogation of the gendered, racialised labour of care, the poems flow to a radical, liberatory syntax. Physical and online terrain meld into a surreal ecosystem of speakers, creatures, and excavated histories. Brimming with incantatory power, Andrada’s verses move between breathless candour and seething restraint as they navigate memory and possibility. Piercing the heart of our cultural crisis, these poems are salves, offerings, and warnings.

Brilliant and devastating, TAKE CARE is no doubt one of the most important poetry releases in years, weaving complex themes with intelligence and innovation of form. Eunice Andrada honours women who care but are uncared for, exemplifying the role of rage to echo ancestral stories and to speak against empire. A poet whose courage is necessary and whose words we all need. I can’t stop thinking about this book.
Ellen van Neerven

TAKE CARE is the live wire of poetry that does not spare us…each poem both a surrender and a severing, each page an urgent demand we do not look away from violence, from its banal to its most grotesque, and each word filled with as much purpose and energy as it is with tenderness and care. Andrada’s writing is a reckoning – it takes us as a society where we need to go, whether we come willingly or not.
Sara Saleh

Andrada’s collection adroitly combines the personal, the political, and the geopolitical, narrated by a voice that is at once hip, witty, and deeply serious. Andrada has the imaginative ability to move between the memories of poet-narrators, historical asides, reflections on the nature of race and feminism in Australia, and questions of colonisation both locally and in the Philippines. Formally remarkable, stylistically impressive, and often surprising, TAKE CARE is a collection that understands the ways in which ‘There are things we must kill / so we can live to celebrate.’
The Stella Prize, judges’ comments

A book by an Ilongga poet living in so-called ‘Australia’ about the machinery of rape as imperialist technology, anathema to life-saving care, opens the aperture to both ecstatic reading and resounding grief.
Lou Garcia-Dolnik, Meanjin

About the Author

Eunice Andrada

Eunice Andrada is a poet and educator. Her first poetry collection Flood Damages (Giramondo Publishing 2018) won the Anne Elder Award and was shortlisted for the Victorian Premier’s Literary Award for Poetry and the Dame Mary Gilmore Award. Born and raised in the Philippines, she currently lives and writes on unceded Gadigal Land.

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Videos

Eunice Andrada reads 'Kundiman' from her TAKE CARE.

Reviews

Andrada conveys with burning precision the experiences of women who must continue to move through the world bearing the scars and wounds of their trauma…a tremendous, transformative work of power and incendiary rage.

Eileen Chong, The Saturday Paper

Sydney Review of Books

Meanjin

The Saturday Paper

Mascara Review

Cordite

Arts Hub

The Bad Feminist

Readings blog

Happy Mag best books of the week

ABC Arts

Readings: The best of Australian poetry 2021

Entropy magazine: Best of 2020-2021

Related News

Eunice Andrada: a note on TAKE CARE

“It is difficult to live in the ‘after’ of sexual assault when empire reminds you time and time again – through the broken justice system, the news, and the stories of people you care about – that what was done to you doesn’t matter. Through the writing of these poems, I’ve tried to map out what it means to live in the ‘after’ while holding the weapons of rage, hope and desire.”

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Our new-look poetry series

‘Whilst designing, I seek to decipher meanings in abstract visual configurations in response to the literary work, as well as to determine how abstract an image can be and retain meaning for others.’ Jenny Grigg describes the process for designing Giramondo’s new-look poetry series.

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