Showing posts with label #poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #poetry. Show all posts

Friday, February 28, 2025

woke up no light: Poems by Leila Mottley

128 Pages | 2024
Summary:
A poignant, rousing debut book of poetry, full of life, from the former Youth Poet Laureate of Oakland, California

woke up no light is a Black girl’s saunter turned to a woman’s defiant strut. These are the hymns of a new generation of poetry. Young, alive, yearning. A mouth swung open and ready to devour. A quest for home in a world that knows only wasteland and wanting.

Moving in sections from “girlhood” to “neighborhood” to “falsehood” to, finally, “womanhood,” these poems reckon with themes of reparations, restitution, and desire. The collection is sharp and raw, wise and rhythmic, a combination that lights up each page. From unearthing histories to searching for ways to dream of a future in a world constantly on the brink of disaster, this young poet sets forth personal and political revelation with piercing detail.

woke up no light confirms Leila Mottley’s arrival and demonstrates the enduring power of her voice—brave and distinctive and thoroughly her own.

Review: There are a lot of different poems with different structures throughout. The level of imagery to metaphor is fantastic for carrying across a message of strength even in her weakest moments. One of my favorite poems in this book was "Birthday lists through the ages" because with so few words, the author was able to relate the emotion of herself in those times of her life. Very specifically the heavy loneliness she experienced without explicitly using the word. Loved the word play in this one and highly recommend to fellow poetry lovers!

 

Saturday, February 15, 2025

Magic Enuff: Poems by Tara M. Stringfellow

 

 112 Pages | 2024
Summary: “Gorgeous poetry” (People) that celebrates Black Southern womanhood and the many ways magic lives in the bonds between mothers, daughters, and sisters, from the bestselling author of Memphis.

These are lush poems full of radical love and strength.”—Warsan Shire, author of Bless the Daughter Raised by a Voice in Her Head

“God can stay asleep / these women in my life are magic enuff”

An electrifying collection of poems that tells a universal tale of survival and revolution through the lens of Black femininity. Tara M. Stringfellow embraces complexity, grappling with the sometimes painful, sometimes wonderful way two conflicting things can be true at the same time. How it’s possible to have a strong voice but also feel silenced. To be loyal to things and people that betray us. To burn as hot with rage as we do with love.

Each poem asks how we can heal and sustain relationships with people, systems, and ourselves. How to reach for the kind of real love that allows for the truth of anger, disappointment, and grief. Unapologetic, unafraid, and glorious in its nuance, this collection argues that when it comes to living in our full humanity, we have—and we are—magic enough. (Courtesy of Amazon)
Review: Not only do I love the direction they went with the cover, but I could really create images in my head as the poems clearly brought me through the writer's thoughts and feelings on the above subjects of relationships (of various kinds) and the black experience. One of my favorite lines was in the poem "Picking No. 2" due to the satisfying alliteration used: 

"elaborate as the cobbler
complicated crisscross of crisp
and crushing correctness"