*Author is a Creative Writing Teaching Fellow (Columbia University), and has been Instruction Librarian (The AIDS Library of Philadelphia FIGHT), Transcribez Youth Writing Program (University of Pennsylvania), Harriet Tubman Collective, Founding Member (2016-Present), Black Lives Matter (Philadelphia, 2014-2015), Poetry Out Loud (2006, 2007), New Jersey Orators (1994-2007) *Author received Global Arts Fund Grant from the Astraea Foundation in 2017 for the creation of works about black struggles for liberation. Parts of SLINGSHOT were created with support from this grant. Author also received an Environment and Climate Change Literary Fellowship from CultureStrike in 2016 for the creation of a machine of mahogany and bronze in its initial form. Parts of SLINGSHOT were created with support from this grant. *Author was a chapter lead in Black Lives Matter Philadelphia, and a great deal of this work is about my misgivings around organizing and activism as I have seen it done and what that means for our movements for justice. They were also involved in Occupy Oakland. *The author was a sex worker and has done sex worker activism since their early twenties and was also a member of the first cohort of the Sex Worker Giving Circle, the first ever sex worker and former sex worker led fundraising circle by a major non-profit in the United States, through Third Wave Fund. *The author is a seer and tarot card reader from a line of seers. *The author lives with Lupus and an Autism Spectrum Disorder and does disability justice work, mostly through writing but also with Harriet Tubman Collective, for which they are a founding member and with organizations like DANT. They spoke at Whitney Museum in 2017 and 2018 about disability justice. They are a Disabled Writers Fellow at Rewire News. *This is an anti-FOSTA/SESTA legislation book. *Of particular interest to Leftist black people of any age. Queers and trans people. *Themes: Manhood--the rejection of manhood, desire for men, desire to be a man/not be a man, fear of men, male violence. Sex--sexual addiction, sex work, casual sex, sexual power exchanges. The woods/The beast/The wildness--
Slingshot is the debut collection from Cyrée Jarelle Johnson and alongside themes of blackness and queerness the poems are full of vibrant language, brief encounters and emotion laid bare. My second read for National Poetry Month and I hope we see much more from this poet!
A tiny excerpt:
“a flamingo knows even without pink lipstick fem is a feeling”
Personal note - I was listening to the Spotify Swagger playlist when I listened to it and that just seemed super appropriate.
Perhaps one day I’ll be able to write a review of this extraordinary collection of poetry that will do it justice but today I’m still digesting and processing each one of these evolutionary, revolutionary poems. I’ll just say that Johnson’s debut is sharp, courageous, candid, original, defiant, dirty, sexy, reflective, gender disrupting, and norm fucking. And I mean this only in the very best ways. This is one I’ll need to read multiple times.
Pick this up because the poems are decadent and stick with you. Keep this because the design is part of the poetry - from the size of the book (feels mighty solid in your hands) to each perfectly placed em dash - cover to cover this book is a work of art.
Some phrases that came to me when I finished reading Slingshot is hologram kaleidoscope and magic mirror of language. I was excitedly describing some of Johnson's poems to a friend and feel like it's rare for a reader to see, sense, and smell the glitter of bodies in the space of a scene, as if the camera was able to zoom in on all six senses and then cross the threshold (and time travel) between memory and dreams. It's almost as if the glitter were the camera, the vowels and consonants the microphone, enacting a countersurveillance on white America and its liberal reimaginings. When the book chants "we hold the line as a practice of freedom" and when those lines get interrupted with "vans... horses.... cops... vans" and the "yet here they are. Fuckin up immediately." several stanzas before I felt like I was there in the crowd, sharing in this giant facepalm of white anarchist bullshit with the speaker, while knowing this particularized moment belongs to a specific people, time, and place.
This book does a lot of beautiful work with internal rhymes, consonance that wraps the tongue with word-flavour, the reworking of traditional forms. At once colloquial and so well-read that I feel like I'm relearning to appreciate the gnarly and difficult poetry that I read in my undergrad (and the hopelessly pretentious way I spoke as a result lololol). I am also just so astounded with how it engages with the complexity and fierceness of queer intimacy, in the "whoa I can't stop blinking did that really just happen" kind of way.
I have such a fondness for "an eight year old with asperger's contemplates suicide" and I'm still recovering from the poem that got me to care about Star Wars. And the reinvention of the pastoral??! GEES.
Before I accidentally reread the entire book again, let me just say: please read this book. It's so beautiful and definitely made me fall in love with poetry all over again.
This Lambda award winning collection is raw, sexy, unrepentant, furious, and above all personal. My impression is that the poet lacks the precision and control that would bring this collection to another level, but perhaps that loose quality is part of its irreverent and irrepressible manner. Nevertheless, I didn’t really understand the line breaks or the mix of titles or no titles, which made the poems and images bleed into one another in an ugly and not effective way.
_Slingshot_ by Cyrée Jarelle Johnson receives 4 stars from me. I think the writing is good, but I didn't get as much out of the poems, as I think I should, or would have liked. This is a fault of the reader, not the poet.
Recommended: yes. I think the poems are visually interesting, and the ones I did like I liked for the story, the characters, and imagery.
The book description is perfection. BRAVE and RAW. This one was a gut-punch that I had to read in multiple sittings. Hard in places and I had to remove myself, but couldn't walk away completely. This one will stay with me.
The poetry itself is good, but needs more TWs than I can personally figure out. Excellent writing, BRUTAL. Don't know how to rate this. This was recommended at the QLL.
I first read "harold mouthfucks the devil" in We Want It All: an anthology of Radical Trans Poetics, and I knew I needed to read more.
Some of my favorites include (and forgive me for butchering titles, I returned the book to the library and am too lazy st the laundromat right now to look up a proper TOC) - the poem about being a fem and going to the philly zoo
-the mahogany and bronze saga that snaked through the collection like a binding tie
-harold mouthfucks the devil of COURSE
-the very specifically referential star wars and hamilton poems (which usually these references are an ick for me in poetry) but they were made in a sharply critical and, i guess bigger picture sort of way that made them work better?
cyrée jarelle johnson is unapologetically queer and Black and femme and it feels like everyone says that about every queer Black femme writer (even the ones that are a little apologetic) but really this collection is uniquely voiced and unable to be pushed into the amalgamation of lit. also huuuge shoutout bc cyrée jarelle is a librarian and librarians fucking stay winning!!!