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142 pages, Hardcover
First published September 29, 2015
Bronzeville Inn Cabins for Coloreds. Here liesThis strikes me as just cutesy. It's an impressive effort, pulling together all these words from different places. But to what effect, ultimately? When everything is brought together completely out of context, the effect seems gimmicky and unfair. The word "relief," for example, means something specific in an art museum context; when you read it in a poem, it takes on a different meaning. But when I read it, my brain is stuck on the fact that this is way out of context, and it doesn't feel right.
Jim Crow drink Coca-Cola white.Customers
Only!
Our textbooks stuttered over the same four pictures every year: that girl
in the foreground, on the balcony: black loafers, white bobby socks, black skirt,
cardigan, white collar. Her hand pointing. The others—all men—looking
so smart, shirt-and-tied, like the gentle men on my street, pointing
as well, toward the air—
the blank page, the well-worn hollow space—
from which the answer was always
that same hoary thud.
Every year these four photographs
taught us how English was really a type of trick math:
like the naked Emperor, you could be a King
capable of imagining just one single dream;
or there could be a body, bloody
at your feet—then you could point at the sky;
or you could be a hunched-over cotton-picking shame;
or you could swing from a tree by your neck into the frame.
Summer
Last summer, two discrete young snakes left their skin
on my small porch, two mornings in a row. Being
postmodern now, I pretended as if I did not see
them, nor understand what I knew to be circling
inside me. Instead, every hour I told my son
to stop with his incessant back-chat. I peeled
a banana. And cursed God—His arrogance,
His gall—to still expect our devotion
after creating love. And mosquitoes. I showed
my son the papery dead skins so he could
know, too, what it feels like when something shows up
at your door—twice—telling you what you already know.