Coming Around
While researching family history for his semibiographical opera Monte and Pinky, Richmond-based poet and songwriter Richard Rose came face to face with the fact of his ancestors' involvement in the local slave trade. As a social and environmental activist, Rose became determined to explore and come to terms with the many consequences of the injustices in which his family took part.
A story in verse, Coming Around is the companion piece to Monte and Pinky, following the life and
descendants of a slave named Simon Abouette and of the Ouillechaud family, who purchase him to work on their sugar plantation in the early 1800s. Interspersed with heartbreaking lyric pieces based on historical anecdotes from across the South, Coming Around is the culmination of one man's effort to heal the hurts of the past through humility, understanding, and acceptance.
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Become an affiliateRichard Rose is Professor of Inclusive Education and Director of the Centre for Education and Research, University of Northampton. He has previously held teaching posts in several parts of the UK including a time as headteacher. Richard has researched and published extensively in the area of special and inclusive education both in the UK and internationally. He is Director of Project IRIS, a longitudinal study of special needs provision in the Republic of Ireland. Richard works regularly in India and has also conducted research and consultancy in several other countries including Georgia, Malaysia, Singapore, China and Estonia.
"'Marsa, buy my chillun' is just super . . . the language is so believable, and the last two lines are so sad and so right . . . . Then in 'Data Driven' I immediately loved the second stanza--so inventive, and the end of it: '. . . and you become the thing you have conveyed. / You are a strand that's twisted in the braid.' . . . The whole 'Weeping Rock' piece . . sounds like a myth, maybe passed down orally . . . so many memorable lines and wonderful images . . ." Mary Barnes, Poetry Society of Virginia, author of Seedlings (2018)
"I have long been a reader and admirer of the poems of Richard L. Rose. He is a poet of keenly balanced opposites, one who can hold contradictions in his head with the mercy of understanding and sympathy, and which he describes as what Robert Lowell once beautifully called 'the grace of accuracy.' With a capacious mind and subtle craft, he writes in different forms about a wide range of subjects. But whatever he touches turns to poetry, and his Coming Around is something I will use to sustain me." Jay Parini, author of New and Collected Poems, 1975-2015
"Part history lesson, part fiction, and all truth, Richard Rose's Coming Around excavates family skeletons and the darkness of mid-sized Southern alleys and holds them up for us 'who idly water bitterness' to examine. We find that from the river to the auction block and back again is not so great a distance . . . and neither is the journey north. Here the annotations add to, rather than distract from, the poems, as we are allowed privileged glimpses into not only the stories, but the poet's process as he works. Through a variety of forms and sharp wordplay, Rose takes us on a road trip into time, pointing out our 'long and comfortable conflicts' by the wayside with the hope that by the end, we too will 'come around' and 'walk [. . .] into the mountains without guide.'" Joanna Lee, author of Dissections
"Grounding his new collection, Coming Around, in the two oracular loci of his own family history--Richmond, Virginia; and Crowley, Louisiana--Richard L. Rose challenges himself and his reader to come to terms with a complex past and present of hard scrabble, racial division, and human resilience. This is iconic American subject matter, but the canvas here is finely detailed: the writer has done his research and imagined himself richly into his particular characters. The poems--in an effort, he explains, 'to decenter from the subject matter'--come in a bravura variety of forms. Their language, elegant and thorny, lyrical and narrative, meditative and muscular, charms the ear and engages the intelligence. Recommended." Derek Kannemeyer, author of An Alphabestiary