"Omar Ramadan's This Sweet Rupture traces the minutiae of vulnerability, the texture of identity, and the redolence of memory amid the spectres of human cruelty. In urgent and tender language, Omar reminds us that, though the echoes, scars, and shadows of war surround us, we can draw strength from family love and the abiding power of beauty in community." Uchechukwu Peter Umezurike, author of there's more "This collection is a lavish feast for the senses as the poems wind through the rugged and often poignant terrain of intimate human relations, and the effect of political violence on family connection. Many of these poems are also about food. So much delicious food. Ramadan's gift with words and story made me want to eat the pages. A tender and rich debut collection by a brilliant young writer." Suzette Mayr, author of The Sleeping Car Porter "From Canadian coastal rains and prairie winters to the sand and seas of Bierut and Khor Fakkan, This Sweet Rupture emulates the warmth of each kitchen, mosque, or picnic, whether in a Dairy Queen parking lot or sandy beach.
Heartwarming and heartbreaking conversations with family and fathers that yearn to shelter a sense of safety. Ramadan playfully reframes ignorance across each stanza through juxtapositions between Islamophobic encounters and things like McDonald's removal of chocolate vanilla twist ice cream. These are haunting and humorous lessons in how to be human. Each poem is a whole world of love amongst our world of wars. Sugars and spices become portals, unravelling histories of manmade violence." Kaitlyn Purcell, author of bédayine "This Sweet Ruptureis waves hushing Vancouver and frost heaves drowning prairies; a tidal force punctuated by cassette tapes and six-seater sedans. Ramadan layers sonic patterns into sensory delights around the dinner table: an Oreo McFlurry, a bowl of lentil soup, a poetic conjuring of stories stuck between fathers and sons that find their way out in the swirl of sugared hot tea. A dazzling collection that makes room for memories of war that not even The Big One can wipe out.
" Cristalle Smith, author of Invisible Lives "Ramadan has finely honed skills as a storyteller, sharply pinpointing the core of a narrative. He's a multisensory observer, invoking tastes, smells, temperatures and those interoceptive sensations that underlie emotion. Whether he's jaywalking to Safeway, fishing for sharks with his uncle, or watching his father disassemble a rifle at the dinner table, we feel ourselves viscerally present. The poems skip across geographies, but each is precisely placed and essential to the sweetness of the whole." Dawn Macdonald, Alberta Views, July/August 2025 # 3 on Edmonton Poetry Bestseller list, March 16, 2025 # 1 on the Edmonton Poetry Bestseller List, March 23, 2025 # 2 on the Edmonton Poetry Bestseller List, March 30, 2025 # 2 on the Edmonton Poetry Bestseller List, April 6, 2025 # 10 on the Edmonton Poetry Bestseller List, April 13, 2025 # 5 on the Edmonton Poetry Bestseller List, April 20, 2025 # 1 on the Edmonton Poetry Bestseller List, April 27, 2025 # 10 on the Edmonton Poetry Bestseller List, June 15, 2025 # 10 on the Edmonton Poetry Bestseller List, June 22, 2025.