"
Light As Light is an illuminating and guiding soundscape that carefully delivers the intrigue of meanderings, of wanderings through an elder's clever bundling-up of the real stuff of life. There is so much love here, subtly coupled with deeper presence of lived matters and intimate knowings of the multitude of places, times, and characters populating these pages, often infused with a touch of
yes, this is it–life, knowing, enjoying! Ortiz brings us to ease in reason in this generous offering of intimate light."–Allison Adelle Hedge Coke, author of
Look at This Blue "In so many ways, Simon continues to stand tall among all his fellow poets. I remember fifty-odd years ago, at the University of New Mexico, there were some poet wannabes in and around just starting the Native American studies program, and this Simon guy stood strong among us, urging all to write their poems and not just talk about it all. An Indian student writing poems? Yes! And Simon energized us all, then as well as now. Especially now.
Especially now. Stay strong, Simon."–Geary Hobson, author
Plain of Jars: And Other Stories "When Pueblo people dance, they dance for everybody–for all beings, the Earth, cosmos, and everything beyond that. Simon Ortiz has always sent poems as blessings, linguistic mosaics reflecting back the spirit in all things. Where else can you find histories telling us that volcanic black rock is either 'yei monster's blood, ' or 'very sticky and gooey pine pitch' thrown up to kill the monster, depending on whose story you're hearing? Simon is the master poet; this new volume is one more masterwork."–Mark Rudd, author of
Underground: My Life with the SDS and the Weathermen "Ortiz breaks a 20-year silence with this collection that celebrates the sacred and the quotidian. A Native poet, he contemplates the gravity and beauty of the written word in both English and the Indigenous language Keres. The interplay of language, culture, and history is a constant throughout this work, suggesting that life is best understood at the intersection of play and philosophical inquiry."–
Alta Journal