Aliza Grace is part of a new generation of poets who didn’t wait for traditional publishing to be heard.
Instead, she found her audience in the quiet, glowing space of a phone screen. Where a few lines, spoken honestly, can travel farther than entire books once did.
A young TikTok poet, Aliza rose to recognition through short, emotionally charged pieces that speak directly to experiences of love, loss, longing, healing, and becoming.
Born in the early 2000s, Aliza grew up in a world where expression was constant but not always meaningful. Poetry became her way of slowing things down. What began as a hobby gradually transformed into something she was willing to share. Her early work carried a rawness that resonated immediately: unpolished, direct, and unafraid of emotional exposure.
Her breakthrough came when one of her poems began circulating widely on TikTok. Viewers connected not because of elaborate language, but because of recognition. Her words felt like something they had thought, but never quite articulated. Lines about learning to live with absence, about life after loss, and about rebuilding oneself quietly became widely quoted and shared.
Aliza’s style is defined by restraint. She avoids overly complex metaphors, choosing instead clarity and emotional precision. Her poems often read like conversations with the oneself; intimate, reflective, and unfinished in a way that invites the reader to step in.
As her audience grew, so did her role. She became not just a poet, but a kind of companion to those navigating difficult emotional terrain. Comment sections under her videos often read like collective diaries, with people sharing their own stories of loss and resilience. Aliza has acknowledged this connection, describing her work as “a place where feelings don’t have to be explained to be understood.”
Despite her viral success, she has remained relatively private. She rarely centers her personal life, allowing the work itself to carry the weight of her identity. This intentional distance has only deepened the universality of her voice. Her poems feel personal, but never exclusive.
In many ways, Aliza Grace represents a shift in how poetry lives in the modern world. No longer confined to pages or academic spaces, it moves quickly, intimately, and democratically. Her work exists in fleeting videos, saved drafts, and shared screenshots; Ephemeral in form, but lasting in impact.
She continues to write, not with the urgency of virality, but with the quiet persistence that defined her beginnings. For Aliza, poetry is not performance. It is a way of staying present with what cannot be easily resolved.
And for millions who have come across her words at just the right moment, that has been enough.
This person plagiarizes her poetry from other poets, including Chlöe Frayne, Sabina Laura, Ruby Dhal, Bianca Sparacino, Beau Taplin, and myself. Amazon has already removed two of her collections for copyright violations. I strongly recommend looking elsewhere for poetry, perhaps toward the poets listed above, who actually create their own original work and do not steal it from others for profit.
Sadly, this person steals work from others and pretends she wrote it. She has plagiarised Kristina Mahr, Bianca Sparacino, Nikita Gill, Sabina Laura, Chloe Frayne, Ruby Dhal and others I’m sure. Absolutely shameful. Please support the real authors instead.
The author has plagiarized numerous poems by Kristina Mahr, Sabina Laura, Nikita Gill, Chloe Frayne, and more poets. She has also taken quotes you can find on a simple Google search and published them as her own. She gives no credit to those poets or creators.
Would’ve been a 6/10 because of the relatable thoughts of heartbreak but because of the plagiarism, the errors, the repetition and the lack of effort in the poems…definitely only giving 2 stars….generously…
thanks to my brother for gifting me the poetry collection by internet sensation “aliza grace” who is most famously known for her poem “he found me crying / he crew too / we both crode”
unfortunately the random blank page in the middle of the book was the best thing about this… 😃
love these books so much. they really do help heal your broken heart. these are all the feelings i wish i was able to put into words. truly touched my heart
I would only give this book 1 star because it has poems of other authors in it that I like. The book is filled with grammar mistakes on every page. The pages are almost empty, 90% of the poems consisting of 5 words. There is no structure whatsoever in the order or content of the poems. It switches between resonating with heartbreak and being head over heels in love every other page, not allowing to process emotions while reading. Some pages just say random things like: “I bet your dog misses me”, next page: “I bet your cat misses me”. I honestly got frustrated while reading the book because I love good poetry and great authors like Bianca Sparacino, Courtney Peppernell or Rupi Kaur. I only finished the book in order to pay some respect to the authors of whom this author seemed to have copied from.
Mediocre poetry writing. These books were the first I actually bought during like Covid before I got into romance. You can find writing like this in tik tok comments