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Against Breaking: On the Power of Poetry

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24th Poet Laureate of the United States Ada Limón inspires us to see poetry as much more than just words—as a powerful force for healing, a call to action, and a vibrant celebration of humanity’s many voices.

Ada Limón—celebrated poet laureate and 2023 MacArthur fellow—takes us on an inspiring journey into a world where poetry is both a soothing balm for the soul and a spark for transformation. With her blend of accessible yet profound prose, Limón delivers a powerful poetry has the ability to heal, connect, and remind us of our shared humanity.

Limón’s mission to make poetry approachable shines brightly in this slim but impactful book. Recognized as a 2024 Time magazine Woman of the Year for her commitment to bringing poetry into everyday lives, Limón passionately argues that poetry is essential to understanding ourselves—our tenderness, courage, imperfections, and our deep, unshakable worthiness of love.

Drawing from her own experiences as the 24th US poet laureate, Limón shares how poetry connects us not only to each other but to the natural world. This theme is at the heart of her project You Are Here, which celebrates the beauty of our environment and our place in it. Her prose, like her poetry, feels like an open invitation—welcoming readers of all backgrounds to explore the richness of human experience through verse.

Fans of Robin Wall Kimmerer, Matthew Zapruder, or Jesmyn Ward will find a kindred spirit in Against Breaking—which offers a refuge, a reminder of the resilience and beauty found within us and all around us. As Limón writes with heartfelt clarity, “If you need to remember what makes us human, tender, brave, flawed, and worthy of love, you need poetry.”

80 pages, Hardcover

Published April 7, 2026

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4296 people want to read

About the author

Ada Limon

34 books2,303 followers
Ada Limón is the author of three books of poetry, Lucky Wreck, This Big Fake World, and Sharks in the Rivers. She received her Master of Fine Arts in Poetry from New York University. Limón has received fellowships from the New York Foundation for the Arts, the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center, and was one of the judges for the 2013 National Book Award in Poetry. She works as a creative writing instructor and a freelance writer while splitting her time between Lexington, Kentucky and Sonoma, California (with a great deal of New York in between). Her new book of poems, Bright Dead Things is forthcoming from Milkweed Editions in 2015.

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5 stars
185 (69%)
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67 (25%)
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15 (5%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 60 reviews
Profile Image for Kara Taghon.
24 reviews4 followers
April 11, 2026
I have never felt scooped up and held by language before, until reading Limón’s work. Another beautiful reminder of why poetry can heal, open large and small doors, and allow us to look inside, if we choose.
Profile Image for Ryan Wilson.
46 reviews
April 8, 2026
If you want to learn poetry, this is less than 50 short pages on what poetry is.

Thank you Ada Limon.
Profile Image for Deb (Readerbuzz) Nance.
6,545 reviews341 followers
April 23, 2026
Ada Limón reads the speech she gave at the end of her term as US Poet Laureate in this short audiobook. She lists all the wonderful reasons people should read poetry, using quotes from poems to back up her views. A delight.
Profile Image for Julie.
143 reviews26 followers
April 28, 2026
A lovely, hopeful read I'll return to again. It's sending me off to re-explore my poetry bookshelves (that I haven't touched enough since my contemplative English major years). How could I forget that poetry is an antidote or balm for these times?

I received a copy through a Goodreads giveaway.
Profile Image for Amanda.
Author 5 books50 followers
April 20, 2026
Love, and learn to love, the vitalness of poetry

“It’s my belief that poetry is something we are all making together, and it belongs to everyone around this planet. And it does not believe in nations, or borders, or cruelty, or power for power’s sake, or wars, or violence, or causing harm; poetry wants us to be our free and best selves, open to wonder and open to making a life that matters—both big and small,” writes Poet Laureate Ada Limón at the end of Against Breaking, which is the powerful and uplifting text of the speech she gave at the end of her term as United States Poet Laureate. Limón wants each of us to live, to find and write beauty and sorrow and rage and delight. We are poetry, she says, write it, even in secret. “You see, if we are lucky enough to live a life in poetry, we are never alone—we are never alone because everyone who has ever written is with us,” Limón offers.
Profile Image for Nicò.
78 reviews316 followers
Read
April 17, 2026
Powerful!

Ada Limón’s closing lecture after being selected as the 24th Poet Laurette of the United States, Against Breaking: On The Power of Poetry is a must listen for ANYONE who wants to get more into poetry!

Ms. Limón used the 50 minutes she was given as an opportunity to “make a case for poetry”, and make a case she did! Limón pulled out so many quotes from so many poems that by the end of the audiobook I had a list full of poets to go research!

I truly cannot overstate how much Ada Limón’s love for poetry shines through this essay. Her belief that poetry makes us braver, that poetry does the work of opening us up to our feelings, that poetry is a container for the heart. I thoroughly enjoyed this audiobook, and Ada Limòn had some GEMS on why AI Art could never be authentic.

“Poetry is a way of testing for humanity. Individuality. If you’ve ever wondered what someone was thinking, or how they remembered a certain event, or how images unfold in their mind, and what the inside of their thought patterns might look like, then you’ve wondered what their poems might sound like.”
Profile Image for Briana.
191 reviews
April 16, 2026
“When you want to create a safe space to stand in, to breathe in, to gather courage, to find your hope again, to find your strength again, you can stand in poetry.”
Profile Image for Sigrun Hodne.
414 reviews58 followers
April 15, 2026
I admire Ada Limón’s poetry deeply, so I came to Against Breaking with high expectations.

The book offers a sincere and accessible reflection on poetry’s value — its capacity to sustain, to witness, and to connect. There is clarity and warmth here, especially for readers less familiar with poetry.

But I found myself wanting a more searching or distinctive perspective. Many of the reflections remain within well-established ideas about what poetry does, without quite extending or complicating them. Given the precision and originality of Limón’s poems, this feels like a missed opportunity.

A thoughtful book, but one that ultimately sends me back to her poems, where her voice feels sharper and more fully alive.
300 reviews2 followers
April 17, 2026
She's right, of course. It's poetry you want when life gets to be too much.
Profile Image for Lisa Ann McCarthy.
Author 2 books14 followers
May 3, 2026
Poetry Is a Lifeline From Survival to Becoming
In Against Breaking: On the Power of Poetry, Ada Limón speaks directly to something many people feel but do not always say. People often poke fun at poets, at poetry, and at the way we think and express ourselves.
I have experienced that myself. I explain things in detail. I notice small moments. Even something as simple as a robin waiting for me when I come home becomes a full story in my mind, “welcome home, sweet lady who feeds me.” Not everyone understands that way of seeing the world.
That is why this line on page 6 stood out so much. She understands the impulse to roll your eyes at poetry. And yet, she reminds us that when so much in the world feels urgent and overwhelming, poetry is not unnecessary. It is a lifeline.
One line that stayed with me deeply is: “This suffering might make for a good poem… or this wonder…”
That line is everything.
Because my own writing began in suffering. My first book came from pain and from trying to process what I had been through. But as I have continued writing, I have seen my voice evolve:
Book 1: Suffering, awakening, survival
Book 2: Strength, rediscovery, grounding
That one line feels like a bridge between both of them.
It reminds me that I do not have to choose between writing from pain or writing from beauty.
Both are true. Both belong.
Another powerful reminder in this book is that poetry can help us “get through this day to the next,” while also helping us “gather strength collectively.” That stayed with me, because poetry is not only personal. It connects us and reminds us we are not alone.
What also resonated deeply is the idea of possibility. Questioning what we have been told. Shifting the center. Allowing something new to begin.
For me, my faith and healing became that center. I came from things that could have defined me, but I questioned them. I chose to grow. I chose to create a new life.
This book reminded me to keep noticing, not just the pain, but the wonder too.
And next time I find myself in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, I will not just see it as a place.
I will be looking for poetry in it.
I highly recommend this book to anyone who has ever questioned poetry, needed encouragement, or simply needed something to help them keep going.
Profile Image for Bonny.
1,045 reviews25 followers
Review of advance copy received from Edelweiss+
January 24, 2026
Against Breaking is a slim book that manages to feel both intimate and expansive. Ada Limón writes with the same clarity, warmth, and emotional intelligence that make her poetry so resonant, and here she makes a compelling, generous case for why poetry matters, not as an academic exercise, but as a part of being human.

Drawing on her experience as the 24th Poet Laureate of the United States, Limón reflects on poetry as a force for connection, healing, and attention. Her prose is accessible without ever being simplistic; it’s thoughtful, inviting, and deeply humane. This is not a book that tells you what poetry should be, but one that gently opens a door and says: come in, this is for you, too.

One of the most moving threads in the book is her insistence on tenderness, not as weakness, but as courage. Limón writes about worthiness, about paying attention to the natural world, and about the way language can tether us to one another in fractured times. Her You Are Here project, which centers place, environment, and belonging, underscores how poetry can reorient us toward care, for the land, for others, and for ourselves.

What I loved most is how welcoming this book feels. It doesn’t demand prior knowledge or reverence for poetry; instead, it meets the reader exactly where they are. Limón’s writing reminds us that noticing is an ethical act, and that beauty and grief often coexist.

Against Breaking is a refuge, a rallying cry, and a reminder. If you’ve ever felt intimidated by poetry, this book will help dissolve that fear. If you already love poetry, it will renew and deepen that love. And if you simply need reassurance that being tender, flawed, and attentive still matters, this book offers that, generously and without pretense.

Thank you to NetGalley and Scribner for providing me with a copy of this book. It will be published on April 7, 2026.
Profile Image for Holly Dyer.
541 reviews22 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 13, 2026
3.75// This short book is a publication of Ada Limón’s closing lecture as U.S. Poet Laureate at the Library of Congress in April 2025. She beautifully articulates the need for poetry in our society. Poetry helps us to slow down, pay attention to what’s around us, express sentiments larger than ourselves, find connection and belonging, discover what it truly means to be human, and also to inspire us to take action. I did really enjoy this quote: “But if you feel the need to trust language again, to remember that language could have power, could hold multiple truths, then you need poetry. If you need to be reminded of what makes us human, tender, brave, flawed, and worthy of love, then you need poetry.” I also got a brief glimpse of what Limón’s work as Poet Laureate entailed in promoting the reading and writing of poetry to the country, as well as the current projects that were touched by poems.

I don’t always love the concept of publishing speeches or lectures and calling them a book. This was very short and could be read easily in one sitting, and I felt like it only scratched the tip of the iceberg. I also felt like it would speak more to poets than to readers of poetry, which made me feel like I was not the exact audience. I think this could have been longer, and I would have loved more insight into Limón’s work as Poet Laureate. This did inspire me to go into her backlog, including her anthology YOU ARE HERE.

Thanks to Scribner and NetGalley for the ARC.
Profile Image for Kym.
765 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 8, 2026
In these dark and muddled times, I frequently find myself turning to the words of my favorite poets for comfort, refuge, and sanctuary. What a gift, then, to receive an advance copy of Ada Límon’s slim volume Against Breaking: On the Power of Poetry, due to be published in early April 2026.

Lately, I find my emotions live very close to the surface. It doesn’t take much these days, it seems, to reach my tender heart and bring tears to my eyes. Such was the case as I read Ada Límon’s heartfelt words in this, her closing lecture to the Library of Congress as she ended her term as the 24th Poet Laureate of the United States. What a beautiful case she makes . . . for poetry! Right now. For all of us. As the world we know shifts under our feet, Ada Límon reminds us that poetry can save us with its offer of hope and connection and possibility.

I cannot wait to have a copy of this wonderful volume for my own poetry library. I will read it again and again. And probably cry every time I do.

Thank you to NetGalley and Scribner for providing me with an advance copy of Ada Límon’s Against Breaking: On the Power of Poetry in exchange for my honest review. This book will be published on April 7, 2026.

5 stars
Profile Image for McKinzie Payton.
39 reviews4 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 21, 2026
I received a copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for my honest review.

Against Breaking: On the Power of Poetry by Ada Limón is a heartfelt reminder that poetry is what makes us human. This book memorializes the closing lecture Limón delivered at the Library of Congress on April 17, 2025, when she completed her tenure as the 24th Poet Laureate of the United States.

In her address, Limón talks about not just her achievements as poet laureate—notably "You Are Here", a public poetry initiative that installed poems in National Parks—but also the lessons she learned during her time criss-crossing the continent. She concludes that poetry is a powerful tool for processing personal experiences, as well as a bridge that connects individuals through the emotion and music of words. Limón draws upon her breadth of poetic knowledge and her own love of the art form to share poems that hold meaning for her, from "The New Colossus" by Emma Lazarus to "Tired" by Langston Hughes, and calls for subversive poetry in the face of the current political climate and the rise of AI.

Against Breaking is a tiny text that packs powerful inspiration for anyone who loves poetry. My only wish is that there could have been more of it.
Profile Image for Grady.
Author 51 books1,841 followers
April 13, 2026
‘It gives me great joy to know people are writing secret poems’

California poet Ada Limón has become an established artist, her award-winning poems appearing in the New Yorker, the New York Times, Tin House, and the American Poetry Review, among others. Her voice is gentle, her words flow like nature, and her thoughts touch memories and expectations so sensitively that she sits beside us, communicating through her memorable poems.

While this book is not a selection of her poems, it is a gentle discussion with the reader about the power and sensitivity of poetry. ‘If we are lucky enough to live a life in poetry, we are never alone – we are never alone because everyone who has ever written is with us…sometimes we even place our words there, tenderly, eagerly, to remain for others to find.’ In reflecting on the experience of being honored as the Poet Laureate of the United States 1922 – 1925, she offers, ‘I had the great fortune to listen to people tell me what poetry means to them.’ And that is what this brief but impressive volume shares – the special place poetry thrives in our lives.
22 reviews
April 10, 2026
The author gave a speech in 2025, at the end of her time as the U.S. poet laureate, and this short book is that speech. She explains that the power of poetry is its ability to connect to people’s lives, to address their feelings. “Poetry responds to things that are too large to be said, when the feeling is too big.” She applauds people who told her they write poetry, even if it’s just for themselves. I particularly enjoyed her discussion of the need to live a small life, not just seek a big life. Those who enjoy her poetry, or even the poetry of any poet, would appreciate reading her thoughts about why poetry is a part of their lives.
Profile Image for Ambi.
91 reviews4 followers
January 16, 2026
I adore Ada Limón. Against Breaking: On the Power of Poetry explores Limón’s time as the 24th US poet laureate and the things she accomplished and learned from her three years in the position. I found this small book to be deeply touching. In a time that feels so divisive, this speech brings connection and hope. Poetry is for the people, something Limón expertly demonstrates here.

Thanks to NetGalley and Scribner for the ARC!
Profile Image for James.
1,262 reviews43 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 8, 2026
Ada Limon is a wonderful poet who served as U.S. Poet Laureate for three years. This short book is based on her final speech as she stepped down from that position, a thoughtful insight into the value of poetry, how it fosters connection and wisdom, and how important it is in these perilous times. Highly recommended.

[I received an advanced reader copy via Netgalley. The book will be published April 2026.]
1 review
Review of advance copy received from Goodreads Giveaways
March 25, 2026
What is the definition of poetry? For me – a group of words, rhyming or not, strung together in a way that makes one feel something. While written in prose, this little book definitely left me with feelings. It calls for us to remember that poetry connects us with one another and with our world asks us to embrace poetry in both intimate and public ways. An excellent, grounding read.

I am grateful to have received an advanced copy to review.
Profile Image for Lorren.
214 reviews1 follower
April 3, 2026
AGAINST BREAKING, the speech Ada Limón gave at the closing of her tenure as poet laureate of the United States, is a beautiful call to action. Quoting a diverse spectrum of poets, Limón beautifully and powerfully makes a case for why poetry matters to everyone. I think I’ll be revisiting these words often—they certainly left me feeling stirred up.

I received a copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.
560 reviews6 followers
April 17, 2026
A paean to poetry by the 24th Poet Laureate of the United States. Ada Limon captures poetry's ability to create community and heal the spirit; expertly, she summons forth the poet within each reader, whether audacious or shy. Especially in a broken world, she writes, we need poetry--and then she proves her case in 80 brilliant pages.

Highly recommended. The worse you feel, the more you need this book.
Profile Image for Karen.
249 reviews
May 3, 2026
Limon's book is the text of a talk that she gave toward the close of her term as U.S. Poet Laureate. It's a thoughtful discussion of poetry's place in the world, what the genre can mean to the interested reader. She quotes poems written by notable authors such as Lucille Clifton, Langston Hughes, Mary Oliver and Alberto Rios, offering their work as evidence for why poetry matters. This is a small, slim book whose ideas are larger than its package -- definitely worth reading.
Profile Image for Traci Thomas.
912 reviews13.7k followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
March 15, 2026
I love the way that you can feel Ada Limón's spirit or aura through her work. This is a tiny little book, a speech, filled with so much heart. Reading someone write about/in defense of a thing they believe in is an honor, this book is that. I wish this book was longer and went deeper desperately. I wish she'd expanded on the speech because it feels like there is more to say.
Profile Image for Jennie Peabody Rhoads.
6 reviews2 followers
April 14, 2026
“The right poem can make us recommit to the world.” p39

“[poetry] does not believe in nations, or borders, or cruelty, or power for power’s sake, or wars, or violence, or causing harm; poetry wants us to be our free and best selves, open to wonder and open to making a life that matters—both big and small.” p45
Profile Image for Coco Keehl.
Author 6 books27 followers
April 14, 2026

In this essay by US poet laureate Ada Limon reminds us the power and necessity of poetry. “Sometimes all poetry offers is possibility” and in this life with so much uncertainty this invitation to pay attention is a lyrical call to read and make art because “we have complex feelings and thoughts [that] cannot be summed up.”
Profile Image for Laura.
586 reviews7 followers
April 29, 2026
I read this book in recognition of National poetry month and was moved by Ada Limon's passion for poetry. It was great to learn about the program she initiated in partnership with the US Park Service to add poetry in several National parks. I enjoyed reading her honest and heartfelt defense of poetry and her hope that everyone puts pen to paper...even if it is never shared.
Profile Image for Molly Quinley.
77 reviews
January 18, 2026
Incredibly beautiful prose on the meaning and importance and value of poetry from Ada Limón. This work was inspired and moving, I think I underlined half the book so many poignant words gifted herein. Absolutely stunning.

Thanks to NetGalley and Scribner for the ARC.
Profile Image for BooksAsDreams (Tiffany).
327 reviews9 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 16, 2026
I knew this reading would wreck me. This is Limon’s reading at the Library of Congress after being named U.S. Poet Laureate. I will absolutely buy a hard copy so I can return again and again to the words that capture, magnify, and soothe. Absolutely beautiful and heart-warming.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 60 reviews