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Description
Jamie Maxwell is a Los Angeles-based writer and spoken word poet whose work gives voice to resilience, transformation, and the hidden strength found in survival. Her debut collection, Kintsugi, is a manifestation of recovery, weaving poetry that speaks to the broader human struggles of foster care, addiction, and domestic violence. These experiences, often marked by silence and stigma, become in her work a place of honesty, reflection, and renewal.
Through poems such as Church, What Cocoon Feels Like, Shrinking, and Deliverance, Jamie explores how pain and loss can be reshaped into strength and self-discovery. Her poetry does not simply recount hardship but reframes it as a testament to the capacity of the human spirit to endure, to mend, and to grow.
Drawing inspiration from the Japanese tradition of kintsugi, the practice of repairing broken pottery with gold, Jamie reimagines brokenness not as an ending but as the beginning of something more valuable. Kintsugi reminds readers that the scars of hardship are not meant to be hidden but to shine as golden seams of resilience. This collection is both a personal offering and a universal call to see beauty in repair, worth in survival, and power in transformation.
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Jamie Maxwell is a Los Angeles-based writer and spoken word poet whose work gives voice to resilience, transformation, and the hidden strength found in survival. Her debut collection, Kintsugi, is a manifestation of recovery, weaving poetry that speaks to the broader human struggles of foster care, addiction, and domestic violence. These experiences, often marked by silence and stigma, become in her work a place of honesty, reflection, and renewal.
Through poems such as Church, What Cocoon Feels Like, Shrinking, and Deliverance, Jamie explores how pain and loss can be reshaped into strength and self-discovery. Her poetry does not simply recount hardship but reframes it as a testament to the capacity of the human spirit to endure, to mend, and to grow.
Drawing inspiration from the Japanese tradition of kintsugi, the practice of repairing broken pottery with gold, Jamie reimagines brokenness not as an ending but as the beginning of something more valuable. Kintsugi reminds readers that the scars of hardship are not meant to be hidden but to shine as golden seams of resilience. This collection is both a personal offering and a universal call to see beauty in repair, worth in survival, and power in transformation.
Reviews