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I Do Know Some Things

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The long-anticipated third collection from the revered Richard Siken delivers his most personal and introspective collection yet.

Richard Siken's long-anticipated third collection, I Do Know Some Things, navigates the ruptured landmarks of family trauma: a mother abandons her son, a husband chooses death over his wife. While excavating these losses, personal history unfolds. We witness Siken experience the death of a boyfriend and a stroke that is neglectfully misdiagnosed as a panic attack. Here, we grapple with a body forgetting itself—"the mind that / didn't work, the leg that wouldn't move...". Meditations on language are woven throughout the collection. Nouns won't connect and Siken must speak around a meaning: "dark-struck, slumber-felt, sleep-clogged." To say "black tree" when one means "night." Siken asks us to consider what a body can and cannot relearn. "Part insight, part anecdote," he is meticulous and fearless in his explorations of the stories that build a self. Told in 77 prose poems, I Do Know Some Things teaches us about transformation. We learn to shoulder the dark, to find beauty in "The field [that] had been swept clean of habit."

128 pages, Hardcover

Published August 26, 2025

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1760 people want to read

About the author

Richard Siken

11 books3,688 followers
Richard Siken is an American poet, painter, and filmmaker. His poetry collection Crush won the 2004 Yale Series of Younger Poets prize, a Lambda Literary Award, the Thom Gunn Award, and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. His poems have appeared in The Iowa Review, Conjunctions, Indiana Review and Forklift, Ohio, as well as in the anthologies The Best American Poetry 2000 and Legitimate Dangers. He is a recipient of a Pushcart Prize, two Arizona Commission on the Arts grants, and a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts.

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5 stars
209 (55%)
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121 (32%)
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38 (10%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 136 reviews
Profile Image for Julieta.
74 reviews28 followers
September 17, 2025
i imagine this is how the beatles' groupies felt when a tour was announced lmao
Profile Image for Affan .
141 reviews
July 11, 2025
New poetry collection by Richard Siken??? God is alive and breathing.
Profile Image for Vanessa Liu.
34 reviews
Read
December 17, 2024
I’m seated. the bookstore employees are scared and asking me to leave because it ‘hasn’t even started printing yet’ but i’m simply too seated.
Profile Image for Ken.
Author 3 books1,235 followers
Read
November 4, 2025
According to Glyn Maxwell, that odd bodkin we call "prose poetry" can be defined in a few words: "A prose poem is prose done by a poet." In that case, the poet Richard Siken's latest outing is a collection of prose done by a poet."

Of course, I can play reindeer games, too. I could say this is as much a collection of vignettes as a collection of prose poems, reminiscent as it is of Sandra Cisneros' The House on Mango Street, though I'd say Cisneros' famous book is more poetic prose done by a poet than Siken's.

Still, there has to be something here. The award judges that be have put it up for a National Book Award in 2025, so there's that. And many of the poems deal with recovery from a stroke, reflecting what Richard Siken himself has gone through, so there's THAT, too.

In that sense, the work is very first-person personal, mixing glances at the past with stories of the journey back from a medical crisis. For a look-see, I give you this example of Siken's prose that's a poem that's prose (note that line breaks are not the same in order to fit into GR's margin restrictions):


Fauna

There is something wrong with the deer. It is not all right.
It has caught its leg in a length of something. They cut it
free and let it go but you can tell it is not all right. It might
never be all right. Call it a myth and the truth grows
abstract. Call it a lie and the truth is a double fact.
My stepmother's father was an Elk. We would go to the
lodge to eat roast beef and watch him butt heads with
the other Elks. Sometimes he would raise a glass in praise
and we would clap. Sometimes he would remember and
we would bow our heads. The Elks fought in the war
to end tyranny. They left, they fought, and they came back.
They are not all right. Once, I drove to the end of the world.
It was in Los Angeles. Someone had posted a sign. It read
No U-turn. Parking $5. The beach was nice. I wrote
you a letter in case I died but I threw it away. It was good
practice. We have to practice losing everything. We are deer,
we are headlights. We are the road where they collide.


A nice pairing of the real deer in line 1 and the Elks members, both of whom are "not all right." No, something went wrong somewhere in both cases. Meanwhile, the speaker knows his Buddhism (whether he's aware of Buddhism or not): "We have to practice losing everything."

As was the case with Cisneros, I quite liked this. No, it wasn't an exact match in tone or spirit to that famous slim wonder, but it arrived somewhere on its own terms. And if Siken pulled it off post-stroke, all the more impressive.
Profile Image for Caitlin Conlon.
Author 5 books154 followers
August 11, 2025
4.5 stars, in truth.

This has been my most anticipated poetry release ever since it was announced. Siken is back, he’s playing in a new form, & it’s really, really working. In many ways, this feels like his most personal collection, even moreso than ‘Crush.’ It almost felt too intimate, like reading a diary.

My one critique would be that this felt just a tad long. There were a few poems that I thought could’ve probably been cut to get this under 100 pages without losing any of the narrative in the process. But, really, when we’ve waited so long for another Siken, it seems silly to ask for less.

Not the Siken I’d recommend if you’re new to his work, but one I’d absolutely recommend to anyone familiar with his previous books.
Profile Image for Trin.
2,287 reviews677 followers
August 28, 2025
Siken's new collection is about his recovery from his stroke and the deaths of his parents. His post-stroke style involves these incredible sort of prose-poems -- solid but playful paragraphs that often wallop you with a killer last line. His language and the rhythm of his language are beautiful, and there's so much to chew on here -- this man has experienced The Horrors. I'm glad he survived to tell us about them.

Not the high-octane romanticism of Crush, but a more mature and reflective work. I will definitely be revisiting these.
Profile Image for Hallie.
80 reviews65 followers
October 18, 2025
There’s a rawness to Siken’s poetry that just cannot be duplicated.

If you’re ever wondering what love is, here’s your answer:

“A dog bites down on a stick of dynamite and takes off running. They are going to explode together. Imagine: making someone feel like that, making them lose their mind like that.”

Profile Image for Noor.
12 reviews
October 1, 2025
"we are deer, we are headlights. we are the road where they collide."

"it frightens me, this availability to the world, the vulnerability it takes for possible joy."

mr. siken you speak to a side of my soul i rarely aknowledge. i'll be trying to leave room for the music from now on.
Profile Image for Gerhard.
1,290 reviews870 followers
October 17, 2025
"We have to practice losing everything. We are deer, we are headlights. We are the road where they collide."

Knowing the backstory to Siken's stroke makes this exhausting, and heartbreaking, to read, as the reader is in the crosshairs of empathy and critical analysis. I did not enjoy this at all. Flashes of sublimity are subsumed by mundanity. For me, the most extraordinary poems are 'Sentence' and 'Paragraph', towards the end. Here Siken contends directly with his loss of language, and how this makes word-building even more mysterious , powerful, and urgent in a world where language and meaning itself are under threat by technology (AI) and right-wing rhetoric replacing civic discourse globally. So, in a sense, Siken is us. We all 'know' some things about speaking truth to power, but voices of reason are being silenced globally.
Profile Image for Shruthi.
508 reviews90 followers
to-read-poetry
July 19, 2024
how can i possibly be expected to wait until 2025?

Profile Image for Emily K.
69 reviews
August 6, 2025
I like to read poetry books through in one sitting but this simply made me feel too much and I had to stop several times.
Profile Image for māris šteinbergs.
705 reviews40 followers
October 3, 2025
it’s like getting more lore on your video game character
he writes divine
found this book by accident in Berlin because I didn’t even know he has new stuff coming out
Profile Image for Guoda.
361 reviews
September 29, 2025
I was moved by Siken's experiences, but not by his prose. It pains me to say so as I am a huge fan of his previous work. And, hey, if he decides to publish another collection in ten years, I will still be there to read it, but this one just didn't do it for me.
Profile Image for Kirstine.
466 reviews605 followers
September 14, 2025
Siken keeps breaking my heart and making it bigger, letting all the shadowy corners spill into the light. It's being up late, at a party maybe, or on a drive, with a friend or maybe a stranger, and letting all those things come out that are usually chained in our gut. And they say something or you say something, someone says something, and something inside you clicks into place. You know you will think about it for a long time. You know someone has said something that was true, in the way words can ever be any kind of approximation of truth, and you have a fleeting feeling of being known. A lie, of course, or a soon to be untruth again. The knowing is an ember that the reality of life will extinguish. But it was there.

Once more Siken reaches into my chest and touches my soul.
Profile Image for Gregory Duke.
949 reviews177 followers
did-not-finish
October 10, 2025
I sympathize with the confessional struggles with mortality and his horrific stroke... but this sucks. Apoetic prose poetry. What happened to aesthetics? Dreadfully boring.
Profile Image for emily.
209 reviews1 follower
September 1, 2025
very different from his claim to fame but that's to be expected. this collection is so intimate and personal and also so skillfully written. i was on that shit faster than a new album drop (i was actually over a day late)

“When I die, I will come in fast and low. I will stick the landing. There will be no confusion. The dead will make room for me.”
Profile Image for g.
63 reviews5 followers
May 3, 2024
!!! always, always Siken ♥️
Profile Image for Novi.
117 reviews4 followers
October 18, 2025
still figuring out how to read poetry and books while in medical school. read on the bus to school while fighting car sickness and in between my 2 exams today.

honestly, incredible timing that i read this collection because i have been struggling with accepting how my mental endurance and brain has changed after my concussion earlier this year especially as medical school has been kind of pushing those boundaries. the ripping headaches have returned unfortunately and i hope they go away soon.

siken writes this collection after suffering a stroke, contending with the changes to his body and his mind. several poems describe intimately how it feels to undergo brain injury: the exhaustion of doing even the simplest tasks, sleeping all the time, the grief and pain of not knowing what you will still remember and what you have forgotten, the desperation to return back to oneself, reconfiguring and accepting that one is a different person with a different brain. these poems feel really different than his earlier collection, Crush, but i also really love them. siken's style has changed a bit and i am not sure if that is because of the stroke or the content of this collection. each poem is a solid block of text. rectangular and even on the edges. i really liked that. it reminded me of when i was recovering i just wanted something solid and firm to hold onto. i wanted everything to be easy to understand. i wanted the certainty that i would still be myself or at least know myself. several of the poems focused on this insistence of deeply understanding yourself even when you appear that you don't because your brain cells screaming in pain. i like how this insistence is also in the title "I Do Know Some Things".

easily this makes it into my top fav poetry collections. i actually am going to reread this collection right now even though i just finished it.

poems that stuck out to me:
- Bed
- Yardstick
- The List
- Superposition
- Mind Control
- Wheelchair
- Heat Map
- Pain Scale
Profile Image for K Rejsek.
5 reviews
September 17, 2025
Siken is back with another ten years of skill and deep emotion pulsating throughout the seven sections. Prose block form written in mainly parataxis is the perfect container for what is often funny, often heartbreaking, storytelling about family, and experiencing/recovering from a stroke. Fragmented thoughts give insight into how a mind moves, how it’s not so different from the abstract quality of poetry. The lyric moments sprinkled throughout are things of wonder and slight concern. A friendship is cultivated between reader and speaker.

“I would have taken Zeno to the bottom of the world. I imagine us standing, upside down, on the spot where all the time zones meet, and it is always now, and every step is north.”
Profile Image for Lauren.
635 reviews19 followers
September 25, 2025
In an interview with Poets.org, Richard Siken says, “The line break is one of the most fundamental poetic devices there is. When you break a line, you make a friction between the line and the sentence. The line goes one way, the sentence goes another. The line break produces simultaneous meanings. You get a chord of meanings instead of a single note. After my stroke, I lost my sense of line.”

As a result, the poems in his third collection, I Do Know Some Things, are a single paragraph each. It marks a big change from his previous work; for me, when I think of Siken, the lines breaks are one of the first things to come to mind. I can picture them on the pages of Crush:

These, our bodies, possessed by light.
Tell me we’ll never get used to it.


From Scheherazade, or:

A man takes his sadness down to the river and throws it in the river
but then he’s still left
With the river. A man takes his sadness and throws it away
but then he’s still left with his hands.


From Boot Theory.

But such a big change is understandable, since now marks a big change from then, as well. Siken had a stroke, and had to learn how to walk again, and how to speak, and surely how to write poetry again. I Do Know Some Things is about this journey, as well as his childhood and his relationship with his parents, and their deaths, and his own mortality, and love, and grief, and these themes are certainly not so far from what we would expect from his work.

There’s an intimacy here that feels deeper and more personal than his previous collections, poignant and heartbreaking and occasionally funny (I don’t think my mother wanted to be a cult leader. I’m not sure they wanted her either, but the guru was ready to retire and my mother had charisma and a living room large enough to accommodate everyone, he begins one poem).

Perhaps in part because he had to rediscover language after his stroke (he wrote one of the poems of a time when he couldn’t recall the word ‘waitress’ and came up with ‘restaurant nurse’), there are so many moments in this collection that feel like discovery in themselves:

Where does hope come from? What is a ghost? To have a shadow, there has to be something to block the light. To have a conversation, there has to be someone else in the room with you. If there’s no one else in the room with you, call it thinking and do it quietly. A flame casts no shadow. A ghost never touches the ground. If you do it wrong, the psychiatrist checks the box on the form that reads Talking to someone not visible to staff. Insanity is a culture of one. Ask the projectionist what blocks the light.

From Non-Diegetic Music. Or:

Their names remain on the deed to the house. It isn’t haunted, it’s owned by ghosts. When I die, I will come in fast and low. I will stick the landing. There will be no confusion. The dead will make room for me.

From Real Estate.

I Do Know Some Things is a fairly long collection, and there are probably a few too many poems, although none in particular spring to mind when I consider what could have been cut. Given that, for a long time, it seemed like the more likely scenario was no more poems by this incredible poet at all, I would prefer this option.
Profile Image for Peter.
642 reviews68 followers
September 12, 2025
The best collection of poetry I’ve read in a long time, and possibly better than Crush, but I think only because it feels timely. To my memory, they read completely differently than his earlier work, and I wonder if this is because he had to relearn how to speak. It makes you wonder, which is the highest compliment of any work. Themes of body snatching and possession come up as some of the most curious things, but aren’t the center of the work.

I work in a stroke ward and read this on my moments off on the curb outside the hospital. He is not what staff would call a “nice patient” but reading the book produced greater empathy in me for challenging patients - we can never really know their stories. His poems on aphasia were especially striking to me. There are at least ten, and they challenge understanding of the spoken language and what it can do.

Truly phenomenal poems, and their Lydia Davis-esque quality makes them readable and humorous enough even for non-poetry readers. They are dark, but there is still great joy in reading them. May be my book of the year.
Profile Image for Ami Boughter.
248 reviews2 followers
November 19, 2025
“What is a life? Sediment, residue. Something falls down and soon enough more things fall down and cover it. A red thing, a dark thing. Some chalk, some gold. I drove through it. I viewed it from the side. Where is the point where nostalgia turns into history? Endurance, duration — how long is now? The layered past, the ever-moving present, the void of the unfinished future — we try to measure it. We dig for artifacts and find a shard of pottery, a jawbone. We tell ourselves the story of a bright day in November. It isn’t accurate but we have to live as if some things are true. Landfill, I have a question for you, about the bones of things. Library, I have questions about the bones. Because everyone will die, die. Everyone will die. We rise into language for only so long before we fall back down into silence. It’s a small window, the span of time in which we get to say what we know. I took a picture of myself by the side of the road. Strange picture. I don’t look like that anymore.” "
Profile Image for ash.
601 reviews28 followers
October 12, 2025
I've never read any Siken before -- aside from seeing that 'You're in a car with a beautiful boy' line that was so inescapable on Tumblr in Ye Olden Days that I actually blocked all appearances of 'Siken' lmao -- and I probably won't be reading any after this one. Like another reviewer said, I was moved by Siken's experiences, but not by his language or construction -- though of course managing to find any language again after a stroke attempts to steal it from you is incredible, let alone getting back to poetics -- and ultimately by the end I was, unfortunately, mostly bored.
Profile Image for Lo Celeste Riddell.
Author 1 book7 followers
October 1, 2025
Siken always takes my breath away. painful, painful, but so beautiful and makes me cherish his gift for language even more. gorgeous and heartbreaking
Displaying 1 - 30 of 136 reviews

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