In this book, María Paz Guerrero claws at language to show us its animal core. In Pink Tongue Out, Blind Cat, words become bodies: bodies that stick out their tongues, that collide with one another, that long to be touched. They are also sick bodies, straining to speak, but even soor perhaps because of itthey sing. María Pazs poetry, like the best salsa playlists, always revives us. Eliana Hernandez Pachon
These poems arent just a collection of inspired moments, but the result of a linguistic exploration that generates meaning, of bodies in motion. Juliana Muñoz Toro, El Espectador
Guerreros poems reveal a universe where the intellectual exercise of reading other poets creates a flow of images which, at the same time, sheds light on how those readings created poems in the first place. Gloria Susana Esquivel
It takes great courage to speak about sickness; despite being synonymous, between grief and compassion there is a vast silence in which books like Pink Tongue Out, Blind Cat bring comfort. Francisco José Casado Pérez, Vallejo & Co.