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Black Girl, Call Home

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A Most Anticipated Book of 2021 by Oprah Magazine  Time •  Vogue • Vulture  Essence • Elle • Cosmopolitan  Real Simple • Marie Claire • Refinery 29 •  Shondaland • Pop Sugar • Bustle  Reader's Digest “Nothing short of sublime, and the territory [Mans'] explores...couldn’t be more necessary.”—VogueFrom spoken word poet Jasmine Mans comes an unforgettable poetry collection about race, feminism, and queer identity.   With echoes of Gwendolyn Brooks and Sonia Sanchez, Mans writes to call herself—and us—home. Each poem explores what it means to be a daughter of Newark, and America—and the painful, joyous path to adulthood as a young, queer Black woman. Black Girl, Call Home is a love letter to the wandering Black girl and a vital companion to any woman on a journey to find truth, belonging, and healing.

245 pages, Kindle Edition

First published March 9, 2021

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20595 people want to read

About the author

Jasmine Mans

5 books177 followers
Jasmine Mans is a Black American poet, artist from Newark, New Jersey. She graduated from the University of Wisconsin Madison, with a B.A. in African American Studies. Her debut collection of poetry, Chalk Outlines of Snow Angels, was published in 2012. Mans is the resident poet at the Newark Public Library. She was a member of The Strivers Row Collective.

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5 stars
3,633 (56%)
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604 (9%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,117 reviews
Profile Image for Raven.
131 reviews48 followers
March 7, 2021
There is nothing as emblematic of Black American girlhood than bold and kitschy plastic barrettes, and there is no subject I adore more than Black American girlhood, so I was absolutely elated when I saw the cover of this poetry collection.

But with Black Girl, Call Home, Jasmine Mans is doing much more than celebrating to Black girlhood (though she is certainly doing that too). She is also considering what it means to be a Black mother raising a Black child; the poems in this collection at times frame this as an ethical issue. What is the moral designation assigned to bringing a child into a world that is fraught with systemic oppression. She is also considering our collective ancestors. “A Pouring Thing” is about an enslaved woman being used both chattel and the component of an experiment on reproductive health. At the end of the reading, I felt raw and empty as though something had been ripped from me. In “Refrain: Ledger of Women Patients Sterilized Without Consent,” the poem is simply a list of women, Black, white, and indigenous, who were admitted to the hospital for one thing and were forcibly sterilized just because.

Mans’ use of form is phenomenal, “Missing Girls” is presented as a word search but within the jumble of letters are the names of girls who’ve gone missing. I think the form itself is perhaps saying quite a bit about effort, entertainment, invisibility, and the sheer and overwhelming number of murdered and missing girls. Also her ability to marry the sort of poetry that is heavy on abstractions and the sort of poetry that is vivid in its imagery and skilled in use of poetic devices beguiles me.

This collection is ripe with topics for discussion. One of my favorite poems in the collection, “Whitney: Hologram” goes beyond the creepiness of hologram concerts and encourages us to consider how we live in a society that views people as commodities rather than beings deserving of compassion, even more so for any person of any or multiple marginalized communities. There are also many poems on Kanye West that explore Black women’s tendency towards forgiveness (sometimes instead of accountability) when it comes to people who may not yet deserve it, trans-panic and “crazy” women, being both Black and queer, and so much more.

I want to liken my experience reading this collection to eating a bag of potato chips. One moment the bag is full and the next moment your hands are dusted with salt and the bag is empty. And though you kind of wish there were a few more chips left in the bag, you are both satiated and left with a dull ache in your belly to remind you of salt, vinegar, and that mesmerizing crunch.

Thanks to NetGalley and Berkley Publishing Group for providing me with an ARC and an opportunity to read this collection in exchange for an honest review!
Profile Image for Berit☀️✨ .
2,095 reviews15.7k followers
March 12, 2021
Beautiful. Powerful. Heartbreaking. Relevant.

I am not a poetry person. In fact honestly the last poetry book I read was probably Shel Silverstein in the fifth grade. This book is a far cry from Where the Sidewalk Ends. Jasmine Mans words evoke so much emotion; as a woman, as a mother, as a daughter, as a friend, as a survivor of abuse. Jasmine beautifully expresses her feelings and thoughts on a wide array of topics: race, hairstyles, religion, expectations, rape culture, Family, politics, sexuality pop-culture. Each poem touched my soul in a different way.

Jasmine is a spoken word poet and listening to her poetry elevates it to an entirely new level. I will pop the link two her YouTube video below, but I strongly encourage you to pick up the audiobook. I pre-ordered it and listen to it yesterday. The audiobook left me speechless (and if you know me that’s really hard to do). If you listen to or read one poetry book this year, this decade, this century, make it this one! https://youtu.be/AC1wGvPnTl8

*** Big thank you to Berkley for my gifted copy of this book. All opinions are my own. ***
Profile Image for luce (cry bebè's back from hiatus).
1,555 reviews5,844 followers
May 25, 2022
blogthestorygraphletterboxd tumblrko-fi

3 ½ stars (rounded up)

“A woman stretched her body for me, and I have no words to describe her in wholeness, but without shame, I want you to know her. My mother.”


I have said (or ‘written’) it before but I don’t feel particularly qualified to review poetry collections. This is why I am planning on reading more poetry in 2022. Hopefully, by the end of the year, I will figure out what kind of poetry I like and why. The last poetry collection I read, Time is a Mother, was, in my inexpert eyes, very much all flash and no substance. Black Girl, Call Home manages to have both. The poems included, which vary in length, structure, and style, present readers with a hybrid and vibrant collection. I know descriptors such as raw, powerful, and timely are somewhat clichèd, especially when used the describe the work authored by poc or lgbtq+ ppl, but at this point in time, I cannot think of better words to use for Black Girl, Call Home. Girlhood, queerness, Blackness, daughterhood, belonging, are the recurring subject matters in Jasmine Mans’ poems. She writes candidly of complex mother-daughter relationships, of her sexuality, of her coming of age, of growing up Black, female, and queer in America, of reconciliation, of identity, of grief, of love. Many of her poems also read like indictments to the systemic and institutional racism that are still very much prevalent in the 21st century. She writes about the physical and emotional violence experienced by Black ppl, about the fear mothers feel over their children growing up Black and/or queer in America, about violence against women, about Black hair, about missing girls, about Michelle Obama and Serana, about social media, about God, and about being a lesbian (“1,000 Questions on Gender Roles for a Lesbian” certainly hit close too home). Some of the poems last a few lines, others a few pages. Some have a staccato-quality to them, others adopt a more narrative approach, for example when she gives us a glimpse into her childhood. We also get lists and crosswords, that are not exactly poetry but are nevertheless striking in that they confront us with the names of girls who have gone missing or the names of women who have been sterilized without their consent. The only one that didn’t work for me was the one on periods. I just don’t ‘vibe’ with how periods are more or less mythologised, especially since not all women have them.

Some of the poems in this collection gave me goosebumps, and I believe that is a sign that Black Girl, Call Home is a truly hard-hitting collection. While much of what Mans writes about is equal parts saddening and maddening, her poems retained a lightness and lucidity that made it impossible for me to leave them unfinished. Whenever I started one of her poems I was unable to look away. Her voice demanded to be heard, so I listened.

I thoroughly recommend this collection, especially to those who, unlike me, are more passionate about poetry.
Profile Image for Misha.
199 reviews48 followers
February 16, 2021
This book full of poems was absolutely beautiful. Easily relatable with poems about black hair, what a Black Mother expects of her Black Daughter, and what seeing Black women in the media means, etc.

I'm so happy that I read this.
Profile Image for Traci Thomas.
872 reviews13.3k followers
May 13, 2022
This is a really good collection. I feel like I got it. It’s approachable. It’s funny. It’s serious. It’s playful. It’s a force.
Profile Image for Julie Ehlers.
1,117 reviews1,605 followers
February 1, 2022
Black Girl, Call Home was the eighth book in my October poetry project. It was my first time reading Jasmine Mans, and I was impressed—the comparison to Gwendolyn Brooks is no exaggeration. There are poems that appear to be personal narratives and poems that deal with larger historical events and cultural issues, and Mans does all of these well. My only complaint is that the book is much longer than most poetry collections—more than 200 pages—and there are definitely stretches that felt, to me, like padding. If those had been left out, the overall impact of this book would have been incredible. As it is, the length detracted from my overall reading experience, and for that reason I'm giving Black Girl, Call Home four stars instead of five. Still, I'll look forward to Mans's next book.
Profile Image for Amy Imogene Reads.
1,215 reviews1,146 followers
May 4, 2023
An author blurb on the back of my copy states:

“You are carrying in your hands a Black woman’s heart.”
-Jericho Brown

I feel like that quote says it better than anything I could ever say.

Thank you for these words, Jasmine Mans.

Blog | Instagram | Libro.fm Audiobooks
Profile Image for suonnahbooks.
402 reviews672 followers
February 9, 2025
Black girl call home by Jasmine Mans
-I’ve never felt so seen as a black women, this book was a breath of fresh, eye opening and beautiful
-the way she talks about her mom Ouff I felt it, I just wanna hug my momma
-the lessons in here damn I’m gonna need to reread this at different times
-I literally was snapping my fingers and looking around lol
-I wish I could write and describe how I feel like this
-the audiobook made me feel like I’m at an open mic woww
-this book truly made me feel all the feels
Rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Profile Image for Savannah.
46 reviews38 followers
February 16, 2022
This book REALLY made me feel. 🥺 I would not consider myself passionate about poetry however a lot of it has been recommended to me lately and I’m really starting to love it. I can always appreciate ANYTHING black. Of course I also find a lot of the stories to be relatable. A read for everyone! Not just for black women. She talks about trans women, black men there are some homophobic slurs in here as well as rape just incase that’s a trigger for anyone. Nonetheless it’s special for black women and I appreciate that. When it was recommended to me and I looked it up the first thing I loved about it was the cover. It’s beautiful! It’s definitely a quick read however when it comes to poetry I like to take my time and I reread a lot of the poems. So instead of one day I finished it in two. Will definitely be looking for more to read from Jasmine Mans!!! Nerf guns christmas 2019 Tulsa, Secrets, Gravity to God, Searching for a feeling, Your God & A friendly death. Were some of my personal favs. Come through sis!!!!!! 👏🏽
Profile Image for Jonathan David Pope.
152 reviews306 followers
March 11, 2021
It's a spiritual experience reading the work of an author who puts their whole heart on the page. Where you can almost see the vestige of escaped tears attempting to penetrate the paper. You can almost feel their breathe hitch as the writer recalls a memory that is both triggering and inspirational, unlocking a flood of words— like new wine. This collection is full of history and tradition, the memories, regrets, joy, hopes, and prayers of generations of Black women. Jasmine Mans is one to look out for, this was phenomenal.
Profile Image for elea ☆.
370 reviews64 followers
April 21, 2023
"I blame my father for things he cannot control. I blame my father for things he can control but chooses not to."
Profile Image for Jailai.
308 reviews7 followers
April 1, 2024
A book full of poems! They really resonated with my childhood. This was a new genre for me and I loved every bit.
Profile Image for Oyinda.
774 reviews184 followers
March 20, 2021
Book 95 of 2021

Black Girl, Call Home by Jasmine Mans is a powerful and hard hitting collection of poems. This book covers some deep and dark subject matters, that really need to be talked about.

It was so relatable and refreshing, but also very heartbreaking and a gut punch. The author starts with poems relating to childhood memories that evoke nostalgia, just like the cover does. From there, she delves into more serious themes.

She discusses homophobia, from her mother as well as random strangers. She also discusses rape, rape culture, and being a survivor. Despite the title being a call to black girls, she also examines issues relating to being a black boy, and being trans. Police brutality is also explored in this collection.

A part of this collection also examines physical abuse in relationships. Some of the poems also talk about the loss of a loved one.

The language used in this collection is so beautiful and lyrical, it lures you in and talks about these serious issues in a way that is both jarring and soothing. I loved the audiobook, which was narrated by the author. There was so much emotion in her performance and it really tugged at my heartstrings.

My only problem with this collection, and it was a big one, was the Kanye West part and her words about Kim. It really rubbed me the wrong way.

Overall, this was such a beautiful book and I highly recommend it!
Profile Image for Whitney.
556 reviews82 followers
March 9, 2021
You should definitely be aware of some content warnings when going into this: homophobic slurs, racism, mention of Birmingham bombing, gun violence, rape/assault, familial death, parental resentment, cancer, human trafficking, violence against transwomen, trauma, separation of families at the border, forced sterilization without consent, lesbophobia, mentions of sex

I knew as soon as I saw this cover that I was going to love this poetry collection. The cover itself is so gorgeous and unapologetically Black that it was inevitable. The poems themselves spoke to so many important instances in Black culture, while also tackling items that the Black community often avoids discussing. From sexuality, to God, to getting your hair pressed in the kitchen, to rape to Whitney Houston's impact, I don't think there was anything in this collection that didn't speak to me. While I can't personally relate to every experience, I can absolutely attest that each collection touched me in some way because you'd be hard pressed not to find someone who at least knows a Black woman who has experienced these moments or thoughts. Every poem felt extremely personal, reflective, and just beautifully written.
Profile Image for Jayda &#x1f349;.
725 reviews57 followers
November 11, 2022
I never wrote a review for this poetry collection, despite the fact that I gave it 5 stars. Anyways, I absolutely loved this poetry collection, I constantly think about this poetry collection even though it’s been 11 months since I read it. I loved reading about her experiences as a black girl growing up. I would highly recommend this poetry collection to anyone, it’s so good. (5 stars ⭐️)
Profile Image for Candice Hale.
372 reviews28 followers
April 10, 2022
Jasmine Mans’ 𝘽𝙡𝙖𝙘𝙠 𝙂𝙞𝙧𝙡, 𝘾𝙖𝙡𝙡 𝙃𝙤𝙢𝙚 doesn’t read like poetry, but more like a necessary sit-down with an older cousin that needs to love on me hard because America been shittin’ hard on Black girls and women. I’m obedient so I pick up my copy, with my highlighter and pen in hand, and we connect. Mans makes you have an inner dialogue with her. If there’s not a call and response, then this collection wasn’t written for you. There’s a rhythm and blues etched in the lines that pulls you into the scenes she creates. You are pulled into that memory and feel the moments in tandem—you are one. Mans is calling you home figuratively.

𝘽𝙡𝙖𝙘𝙠 𝙂𝙞𝙧𝙡, 𝘾𝙖𝙡𝙡 𝙃𝙤𝙢𝙚 is a strong collection filled with poetry that different readers can relate to or enjoy. But, to me, they feel like love letters to Black girls and women on a journey to healing, understanding, and self-identity. I really felt the following three:

“Birmingham”

* I listened to this poem as I was driving to Birmingham to attend a concert with my girlfriends so it hit differently. It made me very emotional to know I was passing by the church later that evening to get to our venue. Mans writes in the poem: “Sometimes I just be thinking maybe God was too busy trying to protect martin to think about us, I ain’t never ask for that man’s dream.”

“Secrets”
* It alerts us of how we hide our pain, our wounds, and the betrayals of our body. If the world refuses to protect Black women, then we are the only purveyors of Black womanhood. The world will not kill us. We will shame and name our abusers and reclaim our bodies. Protect Black women at all costs.

“She Doesn’t Look Like Rape”
* It shows us that women are not in control of their bodies and are shamed into thinking they are sexual deviants for existing. The speaker states, “She won’t call it rape because she knows her body can handle this type of pain. She will rewrite the story before it’s even over.” Women are strong creatures, right? Other people can support her so the rape can be tucked away and she can just discount it as another trauma. Rape culture lives another day!

I loved this collection. It will forever be connected to me and feel like home.

Profile Image for Daijah.
785 reviews276 followers
June 30, 2023
actual rating: 5/5 stars

read for the tarot readathon 2023: the hierophant

this literally talks about so many things black women face and how that compares to other women of different races and also black men. this was so beautifully told and it felt so good to feel understood but it wasn't afraid to be harsh either. 11/10 recommedn for everybody whether you are a black woman or not
Profile Image for dana.
82 reviews6 followers
July 25, 2023

wow. This collection is incredible. I found it relatable in so many ways.

Favorites ♡:

♡ Speak to Me of My Mother, Who Was She

♡ Period

♡ Momma Said at the Kitchen table

♡ Because I Am A Woman Now

♡ And Jay-Z Says “We’ve Moved Past Kneeling”

♡ Footnotes for Kanye

♡ She Doesn’t Look Like *

♡ Whitney: Hologram

♡ Witch

♡ The Little Mermaid

♡ Kill that * dead

♡ Dear Ex Lover

♡ Serena

I’ll definitely be re reading this because I think that with time I’ll be able to appreciate some of the poems more.
Profile Image for Animée.
77 reviews33 followers
December 31, 2021
With a 4.4 star rating, I was expecting this poetry collection to be really good, but unfortunately it was a let-down.
There were parts of some poems I thought were pretty, but overall I just didn't connect with the collection, and I found the writing to be basic.
Some of the poems reminded me of Nayyirah Waheed and Yrsa Daley-Ward, but not in a good way; more in a "oh you tried" kind of way.
Wish this wasn't the book closing out my reading year :/
Profile Image for Hallie.
80 reviews67 followers
September 23, 2022
Amazing. Definitely will be going back and read over my notes again..
Profile Image for Mackenzie - PhDiva Books.
771 reviews14.6k followers
March 21, 2024
It’s been some time since I have truly gotten into a poetry collection, but when I go back to it I always find something incredibly calming and powerful about poetry. In Jasmine Mans’ collection Black Girl, Call Home, there isn’t a single word, line break, formatting choice, punctuation mark, or blank space that isn’t dripping with meaning.

This collection is a song for black women, from grief, heartache, trauma, love, motherhood, nostalgia, healing, strength, survival, and history. The poems aren’t meant for me, and I felt gratitude to be able to take them in and learn from the collection. I started reading this traditionally but after learning that Jasmine Mans had narrated the spoken word format for the audiobook, I purchased that version and it really added a different experience to her work.

In the written form, I enjoyed the way Mans used different formats to add a depth to each poem that felt unique to that experience. Hearing the poems in Mans’ voice was also incredibly powerful, because the strength and emotion comes through. I think there is a certain magic to spoken word poetry, hearing when the poet speeds up, slows down, gets louder or softer, and pauses. Sometimes the pauses after an emotional line carry the weight of the world in them.

There is an incredible amount of vulnerability in this collection, and it’s one that I’d recommend for a variety of readers. I think poetry can be intimidating but I didn’t find this collection to be at all. This is also a collection that I felt weaving back and then forwards again as I read more really brought different meaning to poems I’d already read. The poems are filled with references to pop culture and iconic or notable figures. Some I felt I probably even missed because Mans doesn’t always call them by name.

Every line carries with it a weight of thought and emotion. When addressing the choice to cast Halle Bailey as the Little Mermaid, Mans says:

“When they tell the Black girl she can’t play mermaid
ask them,
what their people know about holding their breath underwater”.

The poem titled “Missing Girls” is formatted as a crossword puzzle full of the names of missing girls. Particularly impactful are how many names you search for but never find. The poem itself felt to me like a comment both on many of the girls’ names being in plain sight but not seen, and also on all the names that aren’t included because so many forget or don’t pay attention.

Another poem titled “Serena” speaks to the inequity and objectification Serena Williams faced relative to other athletes in her field:

“The will place rules on your
body, say it’s a distraction from
their game,
as if they know better than you
how your bones should wear their own body”

I could go on and on, it’s hard to review a book of poetry because there are so many I want to speak on. There are a sequence of four poems that speak about Whitney Houston that are sobering. In the second, Mans talks about the iconic voice but many of the cries no one listened to. In the next, she talks about a woman who experienced two deaths but only one life. In the last one, Mans talks about the hologram of Whitney Houston that toured:

“A live band
accompanies a woman
who is not there,
like pallbearers.

Black body still
under contract.”

I can’t recommend this collection enough. Particularly for those who are used to studying 18th and 19th century poetry in school and found it hard to relate to, I think you’ll find this to be much more contemporary and powerful. The spoken word format in the audiobook is also a meaningful way to experience this collection, though I enjoyed the printed version as well.
Profile Image for Nnenna | notesbynnenna.
733 reviews435 followers
April 19, 2021
Thank you to the publisher for giving me a free copy of this book! All opinions are my own.

Let me preface this by saying that I don’t read a ton of poetry, and I think a big reason for that is that I find it somewhat intimidating. I feel like it goes over my head and that I don’t necessarily know what I’m talking about in terms of reviewing it. But all that aside, I really enjoyed reading this collection.

I thought the writing was beautiful. There were lines that had me nodding my head in agreement or pausing/rewinding to read them several times over. I felt like she wrote this collection for Black women and I felt seen and understood. That’s still enough of a novelty feeling for me that I feel the need to comment on it when it happens.

Mans writes about growing up, celebrities, womanhood, and queerness, among other things. I loved the way she played with language and words and form, and I think that’s part of the beauty of poetry, right?

Also, I know she’s a spoken word poet, so I might also try and listen to the audiobook too at some point, as I imagine it might be even better on audio.
Profile Image for Jyia.
31 reviews12 followers
February 18, 2022
So I cried.
This book is like a love letter to black girls and women. There’s so much to resonate with. My favorites are by far her poems that homage to Whitney Houston.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,117 reviews

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