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Omar Sakr Omar Sakr i(7885306 works by) (a.k.a. Omar J. Sakr)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Omar Sakr (interviewer), single work interview 'We’re driving up to Wollongong, a dense dose of green on either side of the highway. Michael Mohammed Ahmad, founder and director of Sweatshop – a western Sydney-based literary collective – is yelling as he drives. He’s not mad, that’s just how he talks, at a speed and octave a notch above what most people would find comfortable, but which is normal for an Arab. Siri pipes up, interrupting Mohammed’s stream of thought with rerouted directions, and he yells at her.' (Introduction)
1 Graze in the Genocide i "My son whose name is radiance", Omar Sakr , 2024 single work poetry
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , 1 February no. 111 2024;
1 Speak, Joy : Say the Words Omar Sakr , 2024 single work essay
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , 1 February no. 111 2024;

'I am a working poet. I spend my days in search and celebration of words, a series of sounds I can weld, if I’m lucky, into insights about being human, and I confess it has never been harder to do so. I have a newborn son, I am a newborn father, and despite a decade of practice at crafting language into literature, this child, so small and insistent and terrifying and beautiful and language-less, has in only a few months shown me how useless, how entirely unnecessary words are for that most important and derided endeavour: love. This is a word, an emotion, a foundational way of living, utterly essential for survival, and yet by invoking it, I’ve erred already – there are few things taken less seriously, or more likely to provoke an eye roll, scoff or sneer, particularly in the realm of writing, which for all that it is deemed effeminate, is nonetheless strangled by a masculine manner and aesthetic. There is an unspoken understanding that one shouldn’t ever be sentimental – meaning literally ‘prompted by feelings’ – and that good prose is ‘muscular’, good writing is ‘brutal’, a ‘gut punch’, a violence. I should know. My own work is often praised with these descriptors, and it’s true, I am geared toward pain, toward sorrow, toward a primal force that makes loss bearable, if that is at all possible, though I would never describe my writing as a violence in the same way that I could never plant a sentence about a flower and hope to see a bud in the soil come spring.' (Introduction)

1 No Context in a Duplex Omar Sakr , 2023 single work poetry
— Appears in: A Line in the Sand 2023;
1 Terrorist i "Do not come to me", Omar Sakr , 2023 single work poetry
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 3-4 June 2023; (p. 13)
1 Self-Care i "Another death, another love shed", Omar Sakr , 2023 single work poetry
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , no. 109 2023;
1 1 y separately published work icon Non-Essential Work Omar Sakr , St Lucia : University of Queensland Press , 2023 25158868 2023 selected work poetry

'In this exciting follow-up to his acclaimed collection The Lost Arabs, award-winning poet Omar Sakr delves deep into his loves and losses to create a riveting literary experience. Asking questions of timeliness and timelessness, ranging between the present and the past, Non-Essential Work is a restless and relentless volume that showcases a poet unquestionably in his prime.'  (Publication summary)

1 Suppositions i "I suppose I am a student of the world and all", Omar Sakr , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Overland [Online] , March 2022;
1 Fruit i "After my mother, who gave me the wounded earth", Omar Sakr , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Overland [Online] , March 2022;
1 Redback i "The strangers living in my house know death", Omar Sakr , 2022 single work poetry
— Appears in: Overland [Online] , March 2022;
1 Shelf Reflection : Omar Sakr Omar Sakr , 2022 single work column
— Appears in: Kill Your Darlings [Online] , March 2022;
1 Losing Touch Omar Sakr , 2022 single work column
— Appears in: Meanjin Online 2022;
1 13 y separately published work icon Son of Sin Omar Sakr , South Melbourne : Affirm Press , 2022 23575478 2022 single work novel

'Poet Omar Sakr’s debut novel is a fierce and fantastic force that illuminates the bonds that bind families together as well as what can break them.

'An estranged father. An abused and abusive mother. An army of relatives. A tapestry of violence, woven across generations and geographies, from Turkey to Lebanon to Western Sydney. This is the legacy left to Jamal Smith, a young queer Muslim trying to escape a past in which memory and rumour trace ugly shapes in the dark. When every thread in life constricts instead of connects, how do you find a way to breathe? Torn between faith and fear, gossip and gospel, family and friendship, Jamal must find and test the limits of love.

'In this extraordinary work, Omar Sakr deftly weaves a multifaceted tale brimming with angels and djinn, racist kangaroos and adoring bats, examining with a poet’s eye the destructive impetus of repressed desire and the complexities that make us human.' (Publication summary)

1 'Do Not Rush' Omar Sakr , 2021 single work prose
— Appears in: Cloud Climbers : Declarations through Images and Words for a Just and Ecologically Sustainabile Peace 2021;
1 Workshop : Borders i "I tell the students to write using only images. For example:", Omar Sakr , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Groundswell: The Overland Judith Wright Poetry Prize for New and Emerging Artists 2021; (p. 170-171)
1 Diary of a Non-Essential Worker i "Did you know violins can shake the earth? Such sweet vessels, tiny", Omar Sakr , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Groundswell: The Overland Judith Wright Poetry Prize for New and Emerging Artists 2021; (p. 167)
1 Jab (Sha’ara) Omar Sakr , 2021 single work essay
— Appears in: Meanjin Online 2021; Meanjin , Summer vol. 80 no. 4 2021;

'The TV won’t stop jabbering; even while muted, captions blare. The phone won’t stop prophesying doom; the computer is its own cacophony; the Kindle idles; I move between devices like an old dog desperate for reassurance. Take all the power away and still I can’t turn off—not while an invisible killer is invisibly everywhere, which is a feeling I have had for as long as I can remember. It’s on everyone’s lips, this stupid language. I’m a poet and I shouldn’t be exhausted by what fuels me—speech, where it meets song—yet I long for silence or at least an unexpected sound. Anything other than another day of jabs. The metaphor here is a fist. Line up for your quick, sharp blow. Do not duck or weave. Resist a lifetime of conditioning. It was developed in a lab. Get it at the chemist, or your local GP, or pop-up jab hub. Your life, our lives, depend on it. Copping the hit. Coppers everywhere. On horses, in helicopters, heaped around our houses. You know the ones. Go get jabbed. We don’t have enough fists, we don’t have enough jobs. Everyone is essential. Except for the usual exceptions, of course. You know the ones.' (Introduction)

1 What Distance Burns i "Smoke softens the trees, a swift omen scented before seen.", Omar Sakr , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June no. 432 2021; (p. 33)
1 A Muslim, Christmas i "The streets are empty-ish.", Omar Sakr , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , 1 May no. 101 2021; Best of Australian Poems 2021 2021; (p. 2)
1 Eye-Bones in Your Throat Omar Sakr , 2021 single work column
— Appears in: Meanjin , Autumn vol. 80 no. 1 2021;

'I’ve been shortlisted for the Prime Minister’s Literary Awards, one of the largest book prizes for authors in Australia; the ceremony is on 10 December, and I don’t want to go. You only need to attend one award ceremony to know why they’re best avoided. First, there is the ugly tension in the room, swirling around a cadre of utterly oblivious rich people for whom this is simply a party at which to display their level of sophistication. Then there is the fantasy mantra invariably doled out, by video montage of previous winners, or sometimes in person, that everyone there is a winner, there are no losers.' (Introduction)

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