Breaking Up With the Cobalt Blues: Poems for Healing

Hot New Release and Amazon Best Seller!

Lindsay Soberano Wilson
Put It To Rest

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Prolific Pulse Press LLC announces the publication of their latest book:

Breaking Up With the Cobalt Blues — Poems for Healing by Lindsay Soberano Wilson

HOT NEW RELEASE!

I want to thank my publisher Lisa Tomey-Zonneveld of Prolific Pulse Press LLC for believing in me and working so closely with me on the design. It’s important for my writing community here at Medium to understand that some of the poems featured in Cobalt Blues were published in these creative contemporary and inspiring publications, such as Put It To Rest, iPoetry, Scribe, Intimately Intricate, Scrittura, Marlene in a Pub. Thank you to the medium writing community for growing with me!

Lindsay Soberano Wilson’s second full-length book of poems, Breaking Up With the Cobalt Blues: Poems For Healing, finds peace in painful, messy, shameful parts of life unearthed at inconvenient times.

Poems about suicide, sexual assault, addiction, intergenerational trauma, domestic violence, Toronto 90s rave culture, and a pandemic, Breaking Up With the Cobalt Blues finds light in the darkness.

The visual and lyrical poems, shed light on hard truths while inspiring readers to “Dance Through the Dark” to find “Glimmers,” instead of tripping on triggers like the poem, “I Tripped on a Wound Today” about being a third-generation Holocaust survivor.

As the creator of Put It To Rest, a mental health literary online hub, Lindsay believes in putting painful stories to rest by writing them out to let them go: Breaking Up With the Cobalt Blues weaves in and out of childhood, coming of age, and adulthood on a healing journey to put the past behind, embrace the present, and trust the future.

In the opening poem, “I Call This Trauma”, the narrator discovers that untying “knots” to fix everything is fruitless, eventually turning to acceptance in “Hope, Are You There?” Breaking Up With The Cobalt Blues culminates in a heroic call to action to break up with victimhood to embrace trauma healing reflected in the beauty of the “northern lights.”

Breaking Up With the Cobalt Blues takes readers on a journey from victimization to becoming self-empowered curators of life, despite the freefall from grace into everyday beauty like being open to receiving “Glimmers.”

So just maybe one can never really break up with the “blues” but there’s no reason why the blues can’t morph into a softer hue that’s part of life rather than a defining moment.

Breaking Up With the Cobalt Blues is about making peace with grief and not letting the past define you, but recreating a future that accepts that pain is a part of life, allowing growth. The concluding poem “Stay Gold” is a tribute to the friends we’ve lost too soon, accepting that only the good die young.

What Others Say

As a Member of the Feminist Caucus via the League of Canadian Poets Lindsay embodies the fraught contraries of a woman’s lived experience, as mother, daughter, granddaughter, so eloquently voiced in these poems.

She ennobles a strength of character and commitment so essential to overcoming intergenerational trauma and consequential familial suffering, by fashioning well-wrought gifts of insight and intuition.

As a shapeshifter, this poet limns a dazzling landscape of premonitions and obsessive thoughts, each word as from an impressionistic painting technique called “pointillism” when dashes of color are applied in distinct patterns to form an image.

While the invention of “cobalt blue” allowed much of the explosive creativity that we see in impressionist and Post-impressionist painting, the poet uses the plural to riff on its emotive and musical significance.

As a literary artist, she reveals in her newfound freedom of choice, extending her truth-telling abilities beyond a depressive dystopian worldview.

The poet as scapegoat nevertheless occupies a sacred, eternal space.

She “pens” what we recognize as the outward boundaries which arise from an epistemology based on heightened bodily impressions transmuted into art.

Assigning blame for reported past assignations simply affords due responsibility, in “How I Became a Poet.”

“Queen of the Sabbath” (and the entity) is the personification of the Jewish day of rest, Saturday. An allusion that she still possesses a prominent position in Judaic mythology is illustrative of tradition and poetic context.

The poet speaks of disenchantment in cyber space alongside dreams of monsters and ugly Medusa head.

“Release me from a litany of sorrows” is a rallying cry. “But the world’s handprints are still on me.”

What remains is “a muse in a cage.”

As muse she envies “[Leonard] Cohen’s Lover, like Suzanne because she’s tameless and irresistible…”

In “How to Live” the advice is: 1. Be Too Much (because more is more) and 2. Love out loud.

Anne Burke Literary Editor of The Prairie Journal

The loss of a loved one through suicide rips one’s entire life apart, almost. Lindsay Soberano Wilson deals with that loss unflinchingly in these poems. From pain,she wrought beauty, from chaos and despair an affirmation of self, as a human being, a woman, a poet. Poetry is “something to lose yourself in and find yourself in.” Cobalt Blues constitutes a journey that Soberano Wilson makes ours through her resilience and love of words. She is a survivor: ultimately her book celebrates being here like in the poem “When I Climb Out of the Darkness.” Breaking Up with the Cobalt Blues is the beacon of light. –

Peter Mladinic, author of House Sitting and The Homesick Mortician.

Poetry can serve all the purposes for the reader and writer. For the writer, Lindsay, it’s a method to document the past and learn from it…to be empowered by it. Lindsay’s poems in her epic collection Breaking Up With the Cobalt Blues purge and process the difficulties of her experiences into quantifiable outbursts of creative prose. She is an artist on a mission, using her gifts and traumas to offer many pages of healing. For the reader, healing opportunities are abundant through offered blessings and, perhaps, through seeing familiar patterns and events from their own lives — a light shown on them to provide the context that may have alluded them, finally revealed to offer the beginnings of a path forward. Read these poems to discover a glimpse into your own pain. Read them for their glimpse of encouragement and support. Read them because maybe they’ll show you how art can make you whole. It’s certainly cheaper than therapy…and no doubt, more enjoyable too.

Rick Lupert,

Author of It’s Spritz O’Clock Somewhere and God Wrestler: a Poem for Every Torah Portion / www.RickLupert.com

About the Author

Lindsay Soberano Wilson is a mom, teacher, internationally published author, and creator of Put It To Rest, a mental health literary hub.

Her debut poetry collection Hoods of Motherhood: A Collection of Poems (Prolific Pulse Press, 2023) reflects on Soberano Wilson’s portrayal of becoming a mother. Her poem, from this collection, “The Japanese Red Maple” was nominated for a Pushcart Prize, and her work was recently nominated for the Best of the Net.

Born in Toronto, Canada, Lindsay is the granddaughter of Spanish Moroccan immigrants and Romanian Holocaust survivors. Her chapbook Casa de mi Corazon: A Travel Journal of Poetry and Memoir (Poetica Publishing, 2021) explores how her sense of community, Canadian Jewish identity, and home was shaped by travel.
Lindsay graduated with an Honours Bachelor of Arts in Creative Writing and English from Concordia University and earned a Master of Arts degree in English and a Bachelor of Education from the University of Toronto.

Recent publications include Jewish Women of Words, Fine Lines Literary Journal, Fevers of the Mind, Avalanches in Poetry III: Poetry, Writings & Art Inspired by Leonard Cohen, Spillwords Press, Cadence, Prolific Pulsations and Proof of Life anthology in honour of 10–7.

In 2023, she earned a scholarship for teachers from the Canadian Society for Yad Vashem to The World Holocaust Remembrance Center in Israel. Lindsay is a member of the Feminist Caucus via The League of Canadian Poets where she and fellow poets amplify women’s voices. She is writing a memoir about being a third-generation Holocaust survivor.

Where to Find

Breaking Up With the Cobalt Blues is available on can be accessed via the following:

Amazon

Barnes & Noble

and Other Online Retailers Coming Soon!

Book Club Discounts

Book Club groups are offered the opportunity to receive a discounted book club package.

Inquire: admin@prolificpulse.com for information.

Interviews for Lindsay Soberano Wilson

Lindsay Soberano Wilson is available for book signings and interviews by contacting:

lindsaysoberano@gmail.com

About Prolific Pulse Press LLC

Prolific Pulse Press LLC is an independent press based in Raleigh, North Carolina. Member/Manager Lisa Tomey-Zonneveld founded the press. The goal of this press is to help poets and other writers develop their works and when ready to present to the book world, publish and present the author.

It’s important for my writing community here at Medium to understand that some of the poems featured in Cobalt Blues were published in these creative contemporary and inspiring publications, such as Put It To Rest, iPoetry, Scribe, Intimately Intricate, Scrittura, Marlene in a Pub. Thank you to the medium writing community for growing with me!

Thank you to the medium writing community for growing with me J.D. Harms Elle Beau ❇︎ Gaby Rogut Anthony O’Dugan Jessica Lee McMillan Aimée Brown Gramblin

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Lindsay Soberano Wilson
Put It To Rest

Pushcart/Best of Net Nom I Cobalt Blues, Hoods of Motherhood & Casa de mi Corazon I Creator: Put It To Rest I Editor: iPoetry |linktr.ee/LindsaySoberano_Wilson