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Down for Whatever

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With a sharp tongue and remarkable wit, Kris Kidd has made a name for himself by penning confessional essays as darkly comedic as they are heartbreaking. With his forthcoming collection of poetry, “Down for Whatever,” Kidd ditches the jokes and lets his guard down even further, painting an intimate portrait of his notoriously troubled youth. What unfolds is an erratic exploration of self that continues to derail with each turning page. Relentlessly unapologetic “Down for Whatever” will shock even Kidd’s most avid readers, and will serve as an unforgettable introduction for those just tuning in.

118 pages, Paperback

Published May 9, 2016

105 people want to read

About the author

Kris Kidd

6 books37 followers
Kris Kidd is an LA-based poet and essayist.

“His shameless style of confessional writing evokes a bruise, so painfully funny and self-deprecatingly sincere that it feels as though we aren’t even supposed to be reading it.” —Huffington Post

"He's fucked up, but he might just be the only writer/poet/thinker/badass that can turn young people back onto poetry." —Paper Magazine

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5 stars
13 (56%)
4 stars
4 (17%)
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4 (17%)
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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for ~Madison.
511 reviews37 followers
January 24, 2021
Didn’t really like this.. at all.
The reason it isn’t a one star is because I did feel the authors pain in some poems but the rest of the poems didn’t really make me feel anything.
This just wasn’t for me.
Profile Image for J..
Author 8 books42 followers
July 3, 2016
I am notoriously hard to impress when it comes to poetry.
This is a fucking impressive collection.
Not just in its raw emotion and vulnerability, but also in its structure. The titles of the poems are placed to the side rather than the more traditional top/centered format because they almost don't matter...what emerges, instead, is a narrative. Almost a traditional 3-act novel-in-verse.
And while, like many readers will be I suspect, I was fascinated by the downward spiral of the end-of-first-section/beginning-of-second-section, it's the third section, the redemption (for lack of a more apt word) that is the gut punch. I dare anyone to read "Homecoming" and not come close to tears, for instance. "Paradise," too.
My only complaint is that there wasn't more.
HIGHLY recommended.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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