
By Fargo Nissim Tbakhi
TERROR COUNTER is a debut collection of poems which acts against the many languages—interpersonal, legal, literary, rhetorical—constricting the lives and meanings of Palestinians.
Publication Date: June 24, 2025
Paperback: 9781646053797
eBook: 9781646053926
Description
Moving through sections of varying experimentalism, from an invented visual form (the Gazan Tunnel) to all-caps queer ecstatic, Fargo Nissim Tbakhi here attempts to carve out a space for the negotiation of an alternative subjecthood.
The voices in this collection are driven by despair, futility, utopia, vulnerability and the spirit of a collective liberation; they move in search of a lyrical voice which can inhabit both the paranoid preservationist mode that facilitates Palestinian survival, and the imaginative possibilities that might make possible Palestinian life. TERROR COUNTER asks: where and how might a Palestinian subject escape the public consumption of American letters? And, ultimately, how can we continue to love each other amidst the endless terror of the colonial world?
Biographical Information
Fargo Nissim Tbakhi is a Palestinian performance artist.
Praise
“Anyone who understands poetry as a search for liberation, whatever the level of that liberation, will hold TERROR COUNTER as compass. Filled with fierce lyric tenderness and clear-eyed commitment to revolutionary aesthetic, TERROR COUNTER is devoted to the redemption of the self from a world ready to usurp this resistance. Fargo Nissim Tbakhi is a Palestinian poetic being of the most natural order. Just wait until you arrive at his elegy for his father. If you’re lucky, you will understand what Sirhan Sirhan means. If you’re lucky, Tbakhi’s performance will let you taste what free is.” —Fady Joudah, author of [...]
“To tunnel through land is to become a root. To tunnel through language is to become its song. Fargo Nissim Tbakhi’s poetry does both, is both—the faithful becoming of the heartbeat. Because TERROR COUNTER is a fight to the LIFE! It is a fight against the state, the black site of American literature, the empire of possibilityeaters. It is a fight to undo being, to be for others, for all. And it is a fight for the right to dream of a future, the future, that is Palestine. Liberation is love poetry. Bring your heart, dear reader. Bring your crowbar.” —Brandon Shimoda, author of The Grave on the Wall
“In this debut collection electric with grief, rage, and love, Tbakhi enacts the liberatory possibilities of a language reclaimed. Through a variety of invented forms and stirring unravelings, these poems tunnel, excavate, eulogize, exclaim, and most elegantly imagine where we might go once we reject the dehumanizing gaze and obsessions of a crumbling empire and return to ourselves and to each other. This book will crack your heart open. Let it, let the light come pouring in.” —Lena Khalaf Tuffaha, author of Something About Living