The Trauma Mantras
A Memoir in Prose Poems
Adrie Kusserow’s The Trauma Mantras is a transformational poetic memoir, weaving the personal experiences of refugees and orphans with themes of life, death, the grimness of social media, capitalism, and Western historical guilt.
Within the book, the constant clashing and intermingling of Western and Eastern ideas leaves gut punches of pain, loss, and the search for dharma in a world that isn’t always kind. Moving from North and East Africa to South Asia and North America, the book includes accounts of the Lost Boys and Girls of Yei, revered dangerous monks, and family friends who cure themselves without modern Western medicine.
Each entry contains new surprises: questioning intentions, the unwavering guilt of privilege, cultural wars, and a battle of the mind and body. There is a refugee looking for genuine human connection with a polite flight attendant, a white American nursing her child in a Sudanese refugee camp, men kickbox-training miles away from war, and a girl using Google as her favorite drug. Everywhere, the imagery pulls attention in and invites engagement; it is gentle, insightful, and at times disturbing, even horrific. Lines are filled with descriptions of nature, as with the sounds of cicadas and the feeling of bright paint. There are also descriptions of how the English language is “noun heavy,” creating further separations between the mind and body—and between humanity and nature within Western culture. Different dialects, sayings from Kusserow’s mother, and the sounds of war flesh the book out further.
The Trauma Mantras is a an insightful lyrical memoir, featuring stories within stories and critiquing Western historical guilt as human beings try to live with different truths at the same time.
Reviewed by
Leanne Galvan
Disclosure: This article is not an endorsement, but a review. The publisher of this book provided free copies of the book to have their book reviewed by a professional reviewer. No fee was paid by the publisher for this review. Foreword Reviews only recommends books that we love. Foreword Magazine, Inc. is disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255.