Testify, Simone John’s first full-length book of poems, experiments with documentary poetics to uplift stories of black people impacted by state-sanctioned violence. The book’s first section weaves Rachel Jeantel’s testimony in the Trayvon Martin trial with Kendrick Lamar lyrics, fixed form and found poems, and personal artifacts. The second section centers on the audio of the dashboard recording that captured Sandra Bland’s fatal police encounter. Excerpts from this exchange are punctuated with elegies for other dead black women, creating a larger commentary about race and gender-based violence. Testify is ultimately a book of witness. It “burdens” its readers “with knowing.” Combined, both chapters serve as an unflinching critique of race and gender supremacy in the United States.
An exemplary debut collection which is memorialization, elegy, and documentary, Simone John wields with dignity and grace the clarity of assertions to which the whole of the United States not should, but MUST attend. In Testify John leads the reader into examinations of brutality with unwavering adjuration.
These testimonial poems command respect and are crafted with an assertive eloquence. From excerpts of Trayvon Martin’s testimony, to a litany of questions regarding the arrest (and subsequent death) of Sandra Bland, John’s poems are unwavering in their demand for a response. Read more at: Poemeleon https://poemeleon.me/truthy-book-reviews
Jarring, raw, and candid, Simone John compiles a plethora of crucial poems in this volume, relaying the pervasive fear and injustices that black Americans have been subjected to. A formidable collective plea for justice that evokes the excruciating pain, sorrow, and exasperation of those who have been persecuted due to the malignant prejudices that pervade America's predominantly white society and its constituent structures.
Detective interviews, arrest footage transcripts, and memory mournfully interwoven together to reveal a deeply personal testimony of human life and death. Less than a hundred pages, yet shoulders the weight of centuries of burden and heartbreak for Black Americans. Beautiful and powerful required reading.
This is my last read of 2017. My words will not do this book justice. Simone John is a gifted local poet whose words will no doubt evoke change (if not to laws and policies then absolutely to our thoughts and perceptions).
Debut book of poetry knocks it out of the park. Trayvon, Sandra Bland, their stories are told here by the witnesses around them and the cameras that were rolling, and John's keen ear. Brilliant. It will make you sob, it will make you angry. It will make you thank God for poetry.