Love Child's Hotbed of Occasional Poetry: Poems & Artifacts
Nikky Finney
(Author)
21,000+ Reviews
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Description
Finalist, Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Poetry
Love Child's Hotbed of Occasional Poetry is a twenty-first-century paean to the sterling love songs humming throughout four hundred years of black American life. National Book Award winner Nikky Finney's fifth collection contains lighthouse poems, narrative hotbeds, and treasured artifacts--copper coins struck from a new matrix for poetry, one that testifies from the witness stand and punctuates the occasional lyric within a new language of "docu-poetry." The ancestors arise and fly, and the black female body is the "insurgent sensualist," hunted but fighting to live and love in the ways it wants and knows best: "I loved being / a black girl but had not yet learned / to play dead . . ." The tenderness of a father's handwritten notes shadows the collection like a ghost, while the treasured, not-for-sale interiority of a black girl's fountainhead takes over every page. "One yellaw gal with an all-black tongue has gone missing." Finney has composed a new black spiritual, and one of the great voices of our time again stamps her singular sound into the new day.Product Details
Price
$29.95
$27.85
Publisher
Triquarterly Books
Publish Date
April 15, 2020
Pages
264
Dimensions
7.0 X 9.5 X 0.9 inches | 1.7 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780810142015
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
NIKKY FINNEY is the author of five books of poetry, including Head Off & Split (Northwestern University Press, 2011), winner of the National Book Award for Poetry. She is the John H. Bennett, Jr., Chair in Creative Writing and Southern Letters at the University of South Carolina. Finney has received the Art for Change Fellowship from the Ford Foundation and currently serves as an ambassador for the University of Arizona Poetry Center's Art for Justice Project.
Reviews
"Finney's skillful, sweeping epic ambitiously connects personal and public history." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "A paean to the culture of African Americans and their history and culture of survival through creativity--in your face, loud, emotional, outrageous truth." --Ed Roberson, author of To See the Earth Before the End of the World