
Mausoleum of Flowers
Daniel Summerhill
(Author)Description
From Kendrick to Kanye, to a Sunday in Oakland with Frank Ocean's falsetto in the foreground, Mausoleum of Flowers is still life set against the backdrop of demise. Daniel Summerhill's sophomore collection grabs fate by the throat and confronts it. What does it mean to continue living when your friends are dying beside you? This collection melds an exploration of spirituality and rebellion with Black tradition. Summerhill's poems invite the reader near in order to self-excavate and explore tones of loss, love, and light.
Product Details
Publisher | CavanKerry Press |
Publish Date | April 12, 2022 |
Pages | 96 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781933880914 |
Dimensions | 8.9 X 6.4 X 0.5 inches | 0.4 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"Summerhill's name precedes him, in the world of these poems, where Black folks are 'basking in the sun around lake merritt, ' where the speakers 'bleed & flowers bloom. . . American fruit.' This is a voice speaking from, not a voice speaking for. A voice declaring 'i, too, am perennial.' It is the poet's eye that redeems, making lists of what is blooming around him: an old Buick's exhaust cloud, a collarbone forming 'in a mother's round belly, ' a Frank Ocean chord progression. Nothing is left out here, not even fear, and everything that remains flowers. Reading these poems--I remember who we are, I notice redemption more. Summerhill muses on the specter of death called America, but in a place called Oakland his verse is 'very much alive.'"-- "Joy Priest, author of 'Horsepower'"
"The assemblage of poems in Daniel Summerhill's Mausoleum of Flowers creates an umbrella of memory through which language becomes the salve, the armor that allows these words to resurrect into something beautiful by living and reliving history. These poems are aware and cognizant of a social condition where silence is not an option; and yet, the poems are tender and loving--aesthetic beauty on the poet's terms."-- "Randall Horton, author of '#289-128: Poems'"
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