Watch Your Language: Visual and Literary Reflections on a Century of American Poetry

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Product Details
Price
$20.00  $18.60
Publisher
Penguin Books
Publish Date
Pages
240
Dimensions
6.0 X 9.0 X 0.7 inches | 0.65 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780143137733

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About the Author
Terrance Hayes is the author of Lighthead, winner of the 2010 National Book Award and finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. His other poetry collections are American Sonnets for My Past and Future Assassin, How to Be Drawn, Wind in a Box, Hip Logic, and Muscular Music, and he is also the author of To Float in the Space Between: A Life and Work in Conversation with the Life and Work of Etheridge Knight, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for criticism. His honors include a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a 2014 MacArthur Fellowship. Hayes lives in New York City, where he is a professor of creative writing at New York University.
Reviews
Praise for Watch Your Language

"A dazzling homage . . . [Watch Your Language is] a verbal and visual feast that defies genres . . . exhilerating . . . Time and time again, [Hayes] introduces a phrase or form that appears familiar, then radically reinvents it. The results are strange, sometimes surreal and always sublimely surprising . . . [He] continues to devise language well worth watching." --The Washington Post

"One reads a book like Hayes's to feel at home in a strange land, to feel one's enthusiasm answered and challenged, to soothe one's uncertainty, and to excite it, in order to get more into poetry . . . I get giddy imagining the view if this were the first panoramic glimpse teenagers got of the poetry landscape . . . I don't think there's ever been a book like this before. A young Black poet reading this book will see the poetic tradition--the past, as well as the present--as it really is, not one tradition at all, but many, carried forward by many kinds of people who are connected not just by scholars' analyses, but by community . . . they will feel invited to poetry, and by no less a host than Terrance Hayes, one of the best and most important poets now writing." --Craig Morgan Teicher, Poetry

"A wildly entertaining and honest view into a poet and artist's rangy mind." --The Millions

"When one of America's great poets assembles his poetic origin story in a collage-like collection of mini essays, illustrations, prose fragments, and assorted feuilletons of a life in poetry, it behooves us all to pay attention. In examining his own path to poetry, Terrance Hayes also manages to excavate a century of nearly forgotten African American poets, reminding us all of the very narrow poetic canon that predominates to this day in the academy. Essential reading." --LitHub

"A freewheeling work of creative originality . . . Equal parts zine, poetic bibliography, and interior atlas to Hayes' literary inheritance, this imaginative undertaking will intrigue aficionados of the author's expanding oeuvre and anyone looking for artistic inspiration." --Booklist