Onjana Yawnghwes The Small Way is a book that has never before been written: poems of love & grief for a spouses transitions to becoming a woman within the continued cradle of support that art and empathy creates. From acknowledging the gentleness that was at the heart of the bond to dealing with the weariness that learning how to cope with anothers transformations brings, Yawnghwes poetry is searingly honest, steeped in lyrical resonances that attempt to effect and honour her own transition to a different kind of relationship with the person she once married, and with her own fragile, fierce self: still singing, still, it shines. Catherine Owen, author of The Day of the Dead
Yawnghwe rigorously examines how falling out of a lovers narrative is more shattering than falling out of love itself. Gender is dissected and disassembled as her spouse transitions, as is the very notion of intimacy itself. Eloquent. Startling original. Betsy Warland, author of Oscar of Between
"Deftly aphoristic, startlingly vivid and affecting, The Small Way breaks open the love poem and presents us with a vital story of change, loss and persistence. Each line resonates with the fundamental mystery of other lives, other bodies, other desires, yet the book is also suffused with indelible traces of connection. This is some of the finest writing on love in recent years." Warren Cariou, director of the Centre for Creative Writing and Oral Culture, University of Manitoba