Concentrate: Poems
Courtney Faye Taylor
(Author)
Description
Winner of the 2021 Cave Canem Poetry Prize, selected by Rachel Eliza Griffiths
In her virtuosic debut, Courtney Faye Taylor explores the under-told history of the murder of Latasha Harlins--a fifteen-year-old Black girl killed by a Korean shop owner, Soon Ja Du, after being falsely accused of shoplifting a bottle of orange juice. Harlins's murder and the following trial, which resulted in no prison time for Du, were inciting incidents of the 1992 Los Angeles uprising, and came to exemplify the long-fraught relationship between Black and Asian American communities in the United States. Through a collage-like approach to collective history and storytelling, Taylor's poems present a profound look into the insidious points at which violence originates against--and between--women of color. Concentrate displays an astounding breadth of form and experimentation in found texts, micro-essays, and visual poems, merging worlds and bending time in order to interrogate inexorable encounters with American patriarchy and White supremacy manifested as sexual and racially charged violence. These poems demand absolute focus on Black womanhood's relentless refusal to be unseen, even and especially when such luminosity exposes an exceptional vulnerability to harm and erasure. Taylor's inventive, intimate book radically reconsiders the cost of memory, forging a path to a future rooted in solidarity and possibility. "Concentrate," she writes. "We have decisions to make. Fire is that decision to make."Product Details
Price
$17.00
$15.81
Publisher
Graywolf Press
Publish Date
November 01, 2022
Pages
96
Dimensions
7.2 X 8.6 X 0.6 inches | 0.7 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781644452103
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About the Author
Courtney Faye Taylor is a writer and visual artist. She is a winner of the Discovery/Boston Review Poetry Prize and an Academy of American Poets Prize. Her work can be found in Poetry, The Nation, Best New Poets 2020, and elsewhere.
Reviews
"This is a monumental work in the vein of Claudia Rankine's Citizen from a remarkable new talent."--Publishers Weekly, starred review
"This is a book that has many layers and forces the reader to not look away, to see alongside the poet, to bear witness beyond the Black female body and into the very soul of humanity."--Angela María Spring, Washington Independent Review of Books
"Taylor shows us the plasticity of this word by braiding language together, just as her auntie spins gold from her scalp."--Ashia Ajani, Split Lip Magazine