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does a glp 1 make you cold Can You Stop Taking GLP‑1 Cold Turkey? What People Really Experience (2026 Guide)

Marsoni M251S
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4.6 ★★★★★
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Verified Purchase
Denise Williams
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 5
Five Stars
Format: Paperback
Thanks!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2018
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Verified Purchase
luvgrdane
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 4
Magic City poetry series
Format: Paperback
This book was recommended to me to add to my poetry collection. It is a book that you can pick up and read a few poems and then put down to try to think of the meaning. It is written very well. Just takes a bit of thinking to understand.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2013
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Lee Ann Roripaugh
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
Down Home Blues
Format: Paperback
Magic City remains, perhaps, my favorite volume out of Yusef Komunyakaa's distinguished body of work. With his characteristic blues and jazz-inflected lyricism, Komunyakaa revisits the harrowing violence and racism of the deep south as viewed through a piercingly translucent prism of personal memory. The poems making up this volume are in many respects a poetry of witness, and the eyes through which which this gritty psychic landscape is revealed to the reader penetrate various scenes of troubled family life, poverty, violence and racism with a razor-sharp clarity rife with anger, sorrow, and beauty. Ranging in age from childhood to young adulthood, the speakers, or witnesses, in these poems see through eyes that are simultaneously innocent and jaded, naive and urbane, unflinchingly tough and lyrically sensitive. These are unforgettable poems. Like good blues, they cut right down to the bone.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2002
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Verified Purchase
Silvia
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 4
Four Stars
Format: Paperback
took a little longer than I expected but overall good quality for a used book .
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Reviewed in the United States on September 24, 2014
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R. H. White
Draper, US
★★★★★ 4
Unblinking portrait of a childhood in the Jim Crow South
Format: Paperback
Komunyakaa, who won the Pulitzer Prize for his Neon Vernacular, here writes about his childhood in a Louisiana town. The poems are poignant but unsentimental: the child's world has a certain kind of innocence but is saturated with violence, from the Klan to his father's abuse of his mother to the pragmatic violence of slaughtering a hog. One of the more exciting elements of this book is Komunyakaa's skill in combining realistic description with startling and even puzzlingly abstract language.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 26, 2000

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