Judas Goat: Poems
Gabrielle Bates's electric debut collection Judas Goat plumbs the depths of intimate relationships. The book's eponymous animal is used to lead sheep to slaughter while its own life is spared, and its harrowing existence echoes through this spellbinding collection of forty poems, which wrestle with betrayal and forced obedience, violence and young womanhood, and the "forbidden felt language" of sexual and sacred love. These poems conjure encounters with figures from scriptures, domesticated animals eyeing the wild, and mothering as a shapeshifting, spectral force; they question what it means to love another person and how to exorcise childhood fears. All the while, the Deep South haunts, and no matter how far away the speaker moves, the South always draws her back home.
In confession, in illumination, Bates establishes herself as an unflinching witness to the risks that desire necessitates, as Judas Goat holds readers close and whispers its unforgettable lines.
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Become an affiliateGabrielle Bates announces herself as a poet of compassion, precision, and heartbreak in all its myriad ways-in Judas Goat, the poet studies and upends stories of suffering in both human and animal worlds. Radiating with the curiosity and wonder of a medieval painter, the poet's refreshing voice creates a glistening world of religious, mythic, pagan, and modern images which interrogate the cruelties in our most intimate relationships: lovers, parents, landscapes, and gods. In poems that are both sharp and tender, she writes of effigies and little lambs, of chisels in the hands of mentors, of early marriages, of subway stations, of white ash and the 'cold blood on the cock of god.' And yet through all the layers of large and little violences emerges a speaker who believes in love, a voice that yearns for the mysterious otherwhere: 'I am too dying/ of what I don't know.' I was stunned by this magnificent debut-here is the voice of a poet I will be reading again and again.--Aria Aber, author of Hard Damage
Inside the slipperiness of language, Gabrielle Bates writes with a precision that is both lush and masterful. Her writing feels like a laser beam dancing under a waterfall, drenched with exquisite diction, ache, and desire. Violence and tenderness are throttled and exposed through human touch and terror, needling the symbolic intensities through the linguistic landscape of animals. Gorgeous questions loom and ricochet throughout Judas Goat, a book that has utterly wrecked my heart and left me in awe as I gasp at lines that wake me up to the wild world. Bates writes, 'If I describe something, anything, long enough, / language will lead me back to wanting it.' This type of yearning creates dazzling entry points inside poems probing and reaching for God, the South, marriage, friendship, mothers, and mentor poets we see as mothers, grieving, and so much longing, longing, longing bursting throughout this remarkable debut.--Tiana Clark, author of I Can't Talk About the Trees Without Blood
Stunning.-- "Autostraddle"
These poems are both generous and spare, full of unconventional portraits of longing--for safety, for love, for a motherhood one doesn't truly desire. Bates is a wise, tender witness to the parts of ourselves we rarely expose.-- "Vulture"
Haunting.-- "Alta Journal"
The debut's sequences on mourning, mothers, and marriage consider the ways in which encounters with nonhuman animals reveal the deception, purchase, and stakes of human behavior.-- "The Poetry Foundation"
The words leap off the page. Bates will be a lasting voice in the modern poetry landscape.-- "Debutiful"
Hypnotic. . . . A deliciously (perhaps devilishly) original book.-- "The Millions"
One of America's most unique voices. . . . Gabrielle Bates is one part rock star, one part bard, offering a debut that perfectly balances an unflinching, badass attitude with the practiced precision of an experienced student of poetics.-- "The Poetry Question"
A sharp-eyed debut.-- "Poets & Writers"
A stunner of a debut. . . . Haunted, funny, and profound.-- "Shondaland"
A sensitive and assured voice. . . . a noteworthy debut, and confirmation of Bates's talent, heart and place in contemporary poetry.-- "Chicago Review of Books"
The haunting and unexpected imagery in this collection makes you want to return to the poems time and time again.-- "Write or Die Magazine"
Ravishing.-- "Garden & Gun Magazine"
Beautiful and devastating and real.-- "Arkansas International"
Expansive, sure, and sharp.-- "Southern Review of Books"
Lives on the blade-edge between forebears Carl Phillips and Brigit Pegeen Kelly--intimate and intoxicated and charged with violence; rooted in scripture, wilderness, home spaces. . . . and the mythic worlds we construct to sustain or drive ourselves.-- "The Adroit Journal"